Trai
speeds up 4G auction process
The spectrum identified includes the 700 Mhz band as well as the 2.5-2.6 gigahertz band. This means
the government will be able to offer 4G spectrum to eight companies, leading to
tough competition.
This exercise is part of Trai's
plan to come out with recommendations on 4G auctions by October. A consultation
paper on the road map is expected by August.
Two spectrum blocks in the 2,300 Mhz
band have already been given for broadband wireless access (BWA) -- with
Reliance Industries getting a pan-India licence in collaboration with the HFCL
group. There are around 12 2G players and five 3G players per circle.
The 4G road map which Trai
is working on envisages allowing voice-over-internet telephony between mobile and
landline networks. At present, internet calls are allowed between PC and PC,
but without any connectivity to a PSTN network.
Permitting voice-over-internet calls will open a new
market, especially for companies such as Reliance Industries, which have bought
a pan-India BWA licence but cannot offer voice calls until they tie up with a
2G operator. At present, they can offer only data services.
Trai is also
planning to come out with a new policy for value-added services which may lead
to sweeping changes in the telecom sector. It will hold consultations on key
issues such as whether value-added services, like other telecom services,
should be bought under a licence regime.
Consultations will also be held on the need for Trai to intervene in bilateral revenue-share agreements
between telecom and value-added service companies. Many software developers
complain that telecom companies squeeze them for margins.
It is also discussing the need to create
intermediaries to offer value-added services solutions to all telecom companies
(become aggregators of such services) based on a transparent revenue-share
model. Right now, telecom companies sign bilateral agreements with value-added
service providers.
Trai says about 108 Mhz spectrum is available in the 700 Mhz
band. However, it says anything between 60 MHz and 84 Mhz
has been taken by government agencies and is used in areas such as analog TV transmission and defence.
Trai is of the
opinion that this band should be kept for 4G applications. It wants an earlier
plan to keep a part of this band for digital broadcasting and mobile TV to be
changed.
In the 2.5 gigahertz band, out of 190 Mhz, 150 Mhz is with the
Department of Space, which has in turn given it for broadcast and mobile
satellite services. Trai is of the opinion that 80 Mhz to 120 Mhz in this band can
be vacated or reformed for broadband wireless services.
Source: Business Standard