Lightera and Nokia announced a collaboration to expand deployment of Optical LAN solutions for enterprise customers across Europe, extending an existing partnership between the two companies into markets including the U.K., Germany, Spain, and Portugal. The initiative combines Lightera’s passive optical infrastructure portfolio with Nokia’s GPON, XGS-PON, and 25G-PON platforms to address growing enterprise demand for higher-capacity, fiber-based local area networks.
The companies are positioning Optical LAN—also referred to as Passive Optical LAN (POL)—as an alternative to traditional copper Ethernet LAN architectures built around distributed switching. In this model, fiber extends deeper into the building network, reducing the amount of active electronics, copper cabling, and telecom closet space required. Lightera says the architecture can lower power consumption, improve scalability, simplify management, and reduce total cost of ownership by up to 50%, while supporting enterprise applications across hospitality, healthcare, manufacturing, education, and retail.
The collaboration arrives as enterprises reassess campus and in-building network infrastructure to support higher bandwidth applications, including AI-driven workloads, building automation, IoT, and converged connectivity services. Under the agreement, Lightera will integrate its passive optical infrastructure with Nokia’s PON portfolio while also providing pre-sales consulting, deployment services, training, and 24×7 technical support through its ecosystem of channel and integration partners across Europe.
- The European rollout extends an existing Lightera–Nokia Optical LAN partnership into new regional enterprise markets.
- The solution combines Lightera’s passive optical cabling and connectivity with Nokia GPON, XGS-PON, and 25G-PON access technologies.
- Target verticals include hospitality, education, manufacturing, healthcare, and retail.
- The companies highlight lower energy use, reduced cabling, improved reach, enhanced security, and simplified operations as core benefits.
- Optical LAN continues to gain attention as enterprises modernize LAN infrastructure for AI-era bandwidth and long-term sustainability goals.
“Through our collaboration with Lightera, we are bringing advanced fiber technology together with strong infrastructure expertise to help organizations across Europe modernize their LAN environments with solutions that are scalable, trusted, and ready for future digital demands,” said Sylvain Rajaud, Vice President and Head of Partner Sales Management, Europe at Nokia.
🌐 Analysis: Optical LAN has been a recurring theme in enterprise infrastructure modernization, especially in large campuses, hotels, hospitals, airports, and multi-building facilities where fiber’s reach and centralized management offer operational advantages over traditional copper Ethernet. Nokia has been one of the more active vendors in this category through its fiber LAN portfolio, while Lightera adds cabling, connectivity, and optical infrastructure expertise through its Furukawa Electric heritage. The move also reflects broader interest in using PON architectures inside enterprise buildings as organizations plan for higher-capacity digital infrastructure tied to AI, IoT, and increasingly dense edge connectivity requirements.
Architectural Comparison: Traditional LAN vs. Passive Optical LAN (POL)
| Architectural Metric | Traditional Active Ethernet LAN | Passive Optical LAN (POL) |
|---|---|---|
| Core Cabling Infrastructure | Heavy, distance-limited (100m) copper patching (Cat6/6A). | Lightweight, long-reach (up to 20km) Singlemode Fiber (SMF). |
| Intermediate Infrastructure | Active access/aggregation switches in distributed TR/TR closets. | Unpowered optical splitters requiring zero power, cooling, or rack space. |
| Space & Facility Footprint | Requires multiple dedicated telecom rooms on every floor. | Consolidates equipment rooms; eliminates up to 70% of floor space demands. |
| Power & Cooling Profile | High; continuous power and dedicated HVAC cooling required per closet. | Low; slashes overall network power consumption by up to 50–60%. |
| Lifecycle & Upgrade Path | Frequent hardware/cable rip-and-replace cycles (5–7 years). | 30+ year fiber life; upgrades from GPON to XGS/25G occur purely at endpoints. |







