CDMA Group Commends Indian 3G Plans

The CDMA Development Group (CDG) says that it welcomes the 3G spectrum allocation recommendations submitted by the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) to the Department of Telecommunications (DoT) for their approval. The CDG agrees with the recommended principles of using spectrum efficiently, ensuring technology and service neutrality, and establishing a level playing field. These principles will lead to increased competition, further growth, and more affordable services for India's consumers. These universally accepted principles should be applied to both 2G and 3G spectrum allocations and assignments in India.

''The CDMA industry commends the TRAI for their work towards balancing the needs of all operators and technologies and reaching an equitable solution that will benefit India and its constituents,'' said Perry LaForge, executive director, CDG. ''CDMA has played an important role in the expansion of telephony and Internet penetration in India. We urge the Indian government to continue stimulating innovation, competition and further investments by bringing balance and fairness to the allocation of its scarce national resources.''

In order to maximize the delivery of 3G services to India's large cities, villages and rural areas, the CDG encourages the DoT to strongly consider allocating and assigning at least 2 x 10 MHz of spectrum in the paired 1900-1910 MHz and 1980-1990 MHz frequency bands. In addition, we encourage reallocating more spectrum in the 800 MHz frequency band.

The CDG supports the recommendation to verify the technical feasibility of co-existing two different 3G technologies in a mixed 1900/2100 MHz band allocation. Mixed 1900 MHz assignments have been used in Indonesia and the Philippines, and multiple technologies (including CDMA2000 and WCDMA) co-exist in the 1900 MHz band in Canada and the United States. The CDG also supports the recommendation to reassign the unused spectrum in the 800 MHz band and re-farm spectrum in the 900 MHz band so that additional carriers can be made available to mitigate a shortage of spectrum in the long-term.

The CDG agrees with the rest of the wireless industry that the recommendations submitted by the TRAI are sensible. However, more can be done to level the playing field within the 2G spectrum bands to increase fair competition. By subjectively allocating 2G spectrum on an incremental basis based on an operator's reported subscriber numbers and a dated spectrum efficiency analysis, CDMA2000 operators are constrained to only half of the amount of spectrum available to GSM operators. The CDG recommends that this unfair policy be rectified and be made consistent with the proposed 3G spectrum policy which places all players on a level playing field. This will ensure India's valuable spectrum is used more efficiently and that all technologies and services are treated equally, without prejudice."

Posted to the site on 3rd October 2006

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