NMT stands for
Nordisk MobilTelefoni or
Nordiska MobilTelefoni-gruppen. The NMT network was opened in Sweden and Norway in 1981, and in Denmark and Finland in 1982. It was a response to the increasing congestion and heavy requirements of the manual mobile phone networks:
ARP (150 M
Hz) in Finland,
MTD (450 MHz) in Sweden and Denmark, and
OLT in Norway. Iceland joined in 1986. However, Ericsson introduced the first commercial service in Saudi Arabia on 1 September 1981 to 1,200 users, as a pilot test project, one month before they did the same in Sweden. By 1985 the network had grown to 110,000 subscribers in
Scandinavia and Finland, 63,300 in Norway alone, which made it the world's largest mobile network at the time. The NMT network has mainly been used in the Nordic countries,
Baltic countries, Switzerland, France, Netherlands, Hungary, Poland, Bulgaria, Romania, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Slovenia, Serbia, Turkey, Croatia, Bosnia, Russia, Ukraine, Belarus and in Asia. The introduction of digital mobile networks such as
GSM has reduced the popularity of NMT and the Nordic countries have suspended their NMT networks. In Estonia the NMT network was shut down in December 2000. In Finland
TeliaSonera's NMT network was suspended on 31 December 2002. Norway's last NMT network was suspended on 31 December 2004. Sweden's
TeliaSonera NMT network was suspended on 31 December 2007. The NMT network (450 MHz) however has one big advantage over GSM which is the range; this advantage is valuable in big but sparsely populated countries such as Iceland. In Iceland, the GSM network reaches 98% of the country's population but only a small proportion of its land area. The NMT system however reaches most of the country and a lot of the surrounding waters, thus the network was popular with fishermen and those traveling in the vast empty mainland. In Iceland the NMT service was stopped on 1 September 2010, when
Síminn closed down its NMT network. In Denmark, Norway and
Sweden the NMT-450 frequencies have been auctioned off to Swedish
Nordisk Mobiltelefon which later became
Ice.net and renamed to
Net 1 that built a digital network using CDMA 450. During 2015, the network has been migrated to 4G. France also developed an NMT network in 1988 (in parallel with
Radiocom 2000) but with slight variations. As a result, it could not roam with other NMT networks around the world. In Russia Uralwestcom shut down their NMT network on 1 September 2006 and Sibirtelecom on 10 January 2008. Skylink, subsidiary company of
Tele2 Russia operates NMT-450 network as of 2016 in
Arkhangelsk Oblast and
Perm Krai. These networks are used in sparsely populated areas with long distance. Although license for the provision of services was valid until 2021, the last NMT-450 network in Russia ceased operation on 30 May 2017, when the last functioning base station located in Kotlas, Arkhangelsk region was switched off.
Legacy and Influence NMT (Nordic Mobile Telephony) not only pioneered mobile communications across the Nordic region, but also laid the groundwork for modern mobile network technology worldwide. Its open standard allowed manufacturers to innovate rapidly, leading to a competitive market and accelerating mobile adoption across Europe and Asia. NMT’s success and design principles directly influenced the development of the
GSM (Global System for Mobile Communications) standard, which would become the world’s most widely used mobile technology. The European telecommunications community applied lessons from NMT—such as open interfaces and scalable coverage—to the development of GSM, which debuted commercially in 1991 and expanded to cover hundreds of countries. According to technology analysts, the far-reaching coverage of NMT’s 450 MHz band set benchmarks for mobile reach in remote and rural areas, influencing not only GSM but also the later rollout of LTE and 5G networks. == Technology ==