In a press conference ahead of Mobile World Congress, Mozilla said that 18 operators including Deutsche Telekom and Telefonica, were signed up.
The mobiles will go head to head with established software from Apple and Google's Android division.
Mozilla described the Firefox OS as an "open alternative".
Firefox phones are likely to be sold first in the developing
world and Eastern Europe and will be at the cheaper end of the
smartphone market, according to Jay Sullivan, vice president of products
at Mozilla.
He said manufacturers LG, ZTE, Huawei and TCL had all committed to building devices, with more firms "to follow".
The platform is based on the HTML5 web programming language which Mr Sullivan says gave it an advantage over Apple and Android.
"The Firefox marketplace is web-based and will allow a device to do things differently," he told the BBC.
"If someone searches for content it will show any apps that
have that content. The web can be searched, indexed and crawled in ways
native apps cannot,"
"Developers are busy and don't have time to learn a new
programming language. We believe that the only remaining eco-system is
the web and there are more developers for the web than for any other
platform in the world."
At the beginning of the year, Mozilla revealed a partnership
with Spanish firm Geeksphone, with handsets made available to
developers.
Analysts at Ovum say the Firefox OS is still "buggy" in its current state
Features copied
Analysts believe Mozilla faces an uphill struggle to be anything other than a niche player in the smartphone market.
"A Firefox phone may be slightly cheaper than an Android one
but the latter has access to Google services and 700,000 apps," said
Nick Dillon, an analyst with research firm Ovum.
For him this year's Mobile World Congress will be all about the "third eco-system."
"We have several players including Jolla Mobile and Ubuntu.
There are a lot of new entrants all vying for that third place," he
said.
Ovum also warned that the Firefox operating system was "slow
and buggy" in its current state adding that it could not "hide behind
price as a justification for poor performance" when Samsung and Nokia
had their own budget devices on the market.
Mozilla showed off its upcoming operating software to the press in Barcelona
Mr Sullivan compared Mozilla's foray into mobile as similar to its first steps in the desktop world with its browser.
"When we got to 10% market share people started listening to us," he said.
"We had a seat at the table, people started copying our features."
The full list of operators signing up to the Firefox OS is:
America Movil, China Unicom, Deutsche Telekom, Etisalat, Hutchison Three
Group, KDDI, KT, MegaFon, Qtel, SingTel, Smart, Sprint, Telecom Italia
Group, Telefonica, Telenor, TMN and VimpelCom.
The organisation said the first countries to get the Firefox
handsets would be Brazil, Colombia, Hungary, Mexico, Montenegro, Poland,
Serbia, Spain and Venezuela.
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