Can Nokia’s Gemini-Based Network Agents Make Autonomous Networks Practical?

Can Nokia's Gemini-Based Network Agents Make Autonomous Networks Practical

Analyst(s): Tom Hollingsworth
Publication Date: June 24, 2026

Nokia and Google Cloud have expanded their partnership to integrate Gemini-powered AI agents into Nokia Assurance Center. The companies aim to help telecom operators accelerate fault resolution, improve operational efficiency, and move toward more automated network operations through a multi-agent architecture built on Google Cloud.

What Is Covered in This Article:

  • Nokia and Google Cloud expanded their partnership to integrate Gemini models into Nokia Assurance Center.
  • Nokia introduced six specialized AI agents designed to automate network assurance, troubleshooting, analytics, and remediation workflows.
  • The multi-agent framework uses Google Cloud’s Agent Development Kit and Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform while running on standard Google Cloud infrastructure.
  • Nokia claims the agents can reduce network problem-solving and remediation times by 50% to 80% while improving accuracy and reducing false alarms.
  • The first two agents are already operational, with a SaaS launch planned through Google Cloud Marketplace in September 2026.

The News: Nokia and Google Cloud announced an expanded partnership that integrates Google’s Gemini models into Nokia Assurance Center, Nokia’s network software suite. The companies developed six specialized AI agents designed to help telecom operators process large volumes of network data, identify root causes of service issues, improve operational efficiency, and accelerate issue resolution.

The initial Router Agent and Event Triage Agent are already functional. Nokia plans to launch the platform as a SaaS offering through Google Cloud Marketplace in September 2026 and will continue expanding agent capabilities across Unified Inventory, Data Suite, and Orchestration applications through rolling software updates beginning in late 2026 and continuing through 2027.

Can Nokia’s Gemini-Based Network Agents Make Autonomous Networks Practical?

Analyst Take: Nokia’s Gemini-based network agents represent a focused attempt to apply agentic AI to one of the most operationally complex environments in enterprise technology. Through the integration of six specialized agents into Nokia Assurance Center, Nokia and Google Cloud are targeting network assurance workflows that traditionally depend on large volumes of alarms, performance data, manual investigation, and operator expertise. The architecture combines intent interpretation, anomaly detection, KPI analysis, event triage, remediation recommendations, and dashboard generation within a coordinated multi-agent framework. Rather than positioning AI as a standalone tool, the companies have embedded it directly into operational processes that network teams use every day.

Network Operations Become More Task-Oriented

The six-agent framework distributes responsibilities across distinct operational functions instead of relying on a single AI model to manage the entire troubleshooting process. The Router Agent acts as the orchestration layer, interpreting user intent and coordinating interactions between agents while maintaining operational guardrails. Supporting agents focus on specific tasks such as root-cause analysis, KPI interpretation, anomaly investigation, remediation guidance, and dashboard creation. This structure allows each agent to contribute domain-specific reasoning while supporting broader workflows across assurance operations. As a result, Nokia is organizing network automation around specialized operational tasks rather than a generalized AI assistant model.

Reducing the Burden of Network Assurance

Modern telecom environments generate large volumes of alerts, alarms, performance indicators, and operational events that can create significant management challenges. Nokia designed the Event Triage Agent to compare active alarms against historical patterns and identify likely root causes and operational impact. The Anomaly Reasoner Agent further narrows operator focus by determining whether unusual behavior represents a genuine issue or a false alarm. The Action Reasoner Agent then correlates active events with available automation catalogs and remediation options to recommend appropriate responses. Together, these capabilities concentrate on helping operators prioritize actionable issues and accelerate investigation workflows.

Human Oversight Remains Central

Nokia’s approach places human decision-making at the center of the automation framework through what it describes as “glass box autonomy.” The Action Reasoner Agent operates primarily as an advisory layer that presents confidence-based recommendations rather than executing changes without visibility. Human engineers retain final approval authority over critical operational actions before automated fixes proceed and are logged. For low-risk and policy-approved scenarios, operators can extend the same architecture into closed-loop automation. This model allows Nokia to introduce higher levels of automation while maintaining operator control over network changes and remediation decisions.

A Multi-Year Platform Expansion Strategy

The announcement extends beyond a single product release and outlines a broader roadmap across Nokia’s software portfolio. Nokia already has the Router Agent and Event Triage Agent operating and plans to make the initial agent package available through Google Cloud Marketplace in September 2026. The company intends to deliver additional agents through rolling software updates rather than waiting for a complete platform release. Future expansions will extend agent capabilities into Unified Inventory, Data Suite, and Orchestration applications beginning in late 2026 and continuing throughout 2027. This phased deployment strategy allows Nokia to introduce agentic capabilities incrementally across multiple operational domains within its network software portfolio.

What to Watch:

  • Operators will begin evaluating whether the reported 50% to 80% reduction in network problem-solving and remediation times can be replicated across production environments.
  • The September 2026 SaaS launch will provide the first opportunity for operators to deploy the certified Router Agent and Event Triage Agent directly within Nokia Assurance Center.
  • Future software releases will determine how effectively Nokia extends agent-based automation into Unified Inventory, Data Suite, and Orchestration applications.
  • Adoption patterns may reveal whether operators prefer advisory workflows under the “glass box autonomy” model or choose to expand into policy-approved closed-loop automation scenarios.

See the complete announcement regarding the integration of Gemini-powered AI agents into Nokia Assurance Center on the Google website.

Declaration of generative AI and AI-assisted technologies in the writing process: This content has been generated with the support of artificial intelligence technologies. Due to the fast pace of content creation and the continuous evolution of data and information, The Futurum Group and its analysts strive to ensure the accuracy and factual integrity of the information presented. However, the opinions and interpretations expressed in this content reflect those of the individual author/analyst. The Futurum Group makes no guarantees regarding the completeness, accuracy, or reliability of any information contained herein. Readers are encouraged to verify facts independently and consult relevant sources for further clarification.
Disclosure: Futurum is a research and advisory firm that engages or has engaged in research, analysis, and advisory services with many technology companies, including those mentioned in this article. The author does not hold any equity positions with any company mentioned in this article.
Analysis and opinions expressed herein are specific to the analyst individually and data and other information that might have been provided for validation, not those of Futurum as a whole.

Other Insights From Futurum:

Is Telefónica and Nokia’s Agentic AI Push a Catalyst for Network API Adoption?

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Can Cisco Cloud Control Make AgenticOps Practical for Enterprises?

Author Information

Tom Hollingsworth
Tom Hollingsworth, CCIE #29213, is The Networking Nerd and Research Director, Networking at Futurum. He has spent the last twenty-five years implementing and understanding IT infrastructure, specializing in data center and campus networking, wireless and mobility solutions, and cybersecurity. He has extensive experience designing and implementing complex architectures and explaining their benefits to stakeholders and practitioners alike.
Tom has hosted numerous Tech Field Day events focused on educating the wider enterprise IT community about solutions and products across the spectrum of offerings. He has participated in roundtable discussions and moderated panels on current and future technology outlooks. His advice is sought after by community members and company stakeholders at all levels. Tom has also hosted a weekly technology news podcast since 2018.
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