Bharti Airtel, Vodafone Idea, and Jio had urged the government to reduce the price, following which the matter went to the regulator for a review.
Telecom
Secretary Anshu Prakash on Monday said the proposal to conduct
spectrum auctions in this financial year could be discussed in the
Digital
Communications Commission (DCC) meeting scheduled next month. He,
however, did not specify the date for the meeting. DCC is the apex
decision-making panel of the government on telecom. The telecom panel
is expected to approve the suggestions made by the Telecom Regulatory
Authority of India (Trai) on the quantum and price of 5G spectrum and
the airwaves in the premium 700 MHz band.
The
regulator said its August 2018 recommendations on spectrum valuation
and reserve prices never mentioned anything on financial health and
capability of the companies to bid, and what is being attributed to
it now is a concern expressed by a section of stakeholders as part of
the consultation process.
Bharti
Airtel, Vodafone
Idea, and Jio had urged the government to reduce the price,
following which the matter went to the regulator for a review.
Trai,
in July 2019, stuck to its original recommendation that radiowaves
used for telecom services on 5G and other bands should be auctioned
at a start price of over Rs 5.7 trillion.
The
last spectrum auction in October 2016 saw only 40 per cent of the
spectrum offered being sold. In that auction, the government had
garnered Rs 65,789 crore from the sale of just 965 MHz. The entire
2,354.44 MHz that was on offer at the base price of Rs 5.63 trillion.
Among
the bandwidth, which went unsold, was the valuable 700 MHz which
telcos gave a miss, citing high base price. The band is considered
premium because of better penetration indoors. Trai recommended
fixing a lower base price of Rs 6,568 crore per MHz, 43 per cent
lower than Rs 11,485 crore set in the 2016 auction.
The
government, which did not auction any spectrum in 2017-18 and 2018-19
fiscal years, wants to hold the country’s biggest auction of over
8,000 MHz of airwaves this year.
In
August 2018, Trai said the 3,300-3,600 MHz band, expected to be the
primary band for 5G services, should be auctioned as a single band
and in blocks of 20 MHz each at Rs 492 crore per MHz.
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