Tag Archive for 'Mobile Broadband'

Germany falls in line with UK and France on harmonization of 800MHz band for mobile broadband

Germany will be the first country after the UK to harmonise the so-called 800MHz band (780-862MHz) for mobile broadband use, and others will follow soon, it emerged yesterday at Informa’s Digital Switchover Strategies conference in London.

Pearse O’Donahue, head of the Radio Spectrum Policy unit in the European Commission’s Information, Society and Media Directorate-General, told delegates that the German move indicated the EC was succeeding in its mission to persuade Member States of the benefits of earmarking a common frequency band across the EU for possible future use by future mobile broadband services (see previous post here).

Els Hendricks, head of European affairs at commercial broadcaster ProSiebenSat.1, confirmed that Germany’s agreement to harmonisation was imminent, subject to the regulator agreeing to certain conditions demanded by German broadcasters.

These included future occupants of the 800MHz band compensating broadcasters for the costs associated with migrating any broadcast services already occupying these frequencies.

In the UK, Ofcom has put these costs at £5-18m.

Matthew Conway, director of operations at Ofcom’s Spectrum Policy Group, indicated there were other European territories apart from Germany that would follow the UK’s lead, but declined to identify them.

However, Elena Puigrefagut, a senior technical engineer at the European Broadcasting Union, argued that those countries that had so far agreed to harmonization were confined to those where the costs of doing so were lowest, because they had minimal usage of the 800MHz band. The EBU’s analysis showed that the first five Member States to agree to the move - Sweden, Finland, Switzerland, France and the UK - all fell into this category.

She concluded that the costs of harmonization were very significant for the majority of European territories, and predicted that it would lead to a ‘second switchover’.

Ofcom following Europe’s lead on clearing 790-862MHz band (so what happened to technology neutrality?)

News that the UK regulator, Ofcom, proposes to follow the example of other European countries such as France, and reserve the 790-862MHz spectrum band for mobile broadband, appears to represent a departure from the regulator’s previous policies towards spectrum allocation.

As recently as June 2008, Ofcom had confirmed its proposals “to take a market-led approach to awarding the digital dividend, giving users the flexibility to decide its use”; and “not to intervene to reserve the spectrum for any particular use, and to award the spectrum by auction.”

In line with this policy, the regulator had resisted European moves to harmonise usage of any particular band across Europe, notably a suggestion to allocate a frequency band for pan-European mobile TV services.

Thus it was that two lots of UHF channels were due to be auctioned off by Ofcom this summer to the highest bidder: 31-40 and 63-68.

According to the latest proposals, however, clearing 790-862MHz would extend the upper of these two bands downwards to include 61-62 (originally only the interleaved spectrum in these frequencies was due to be auctioned off - i.e. the ‘white spaces’ dotted around the country at regional level which remain unused for DTT), and upwards to include 69 (which was to be allocated to Programme Making and Special Events - i.e. wireless microphone use - through a beauty contest).

Among the arguments Ofcom put forward in favour of that move this week is that: “This will allow new wireless services, particularly mobile broadband, to be launched here and across Europe.”

Ofcom goes on to say that it estimates the net benefits of the move, “conservatively, at £2-3 billion in net present value (NPV). A major reason why these benefits are so large is that, if we make the same spectrum available as other countries, better mobile broadband services can be provided to consumers at lower cost.”

Ofcom reiterated this week that this doesn’t represent a departure from a market-led, technology-neutral approach. On the other hand, it does seems to be assuming that mobile broadband services will occupy these frequencies. But how is it able to make that assumption if it believes spectrum to be technology-neutral? Presumably, none of the claimed benefit would be obtained if winning UK bidders for the upper sub-band turned out to want it for TV. Then the costs of the harmonisation (which Ofcom estimates at between £90-200m) would have been wasted.

Clearly, then, Ofcom can no longer really believe in technology neutrality. It is now signalling that given the trend by other European countries to harmonise this band, in effect the spectrum has become much more suitable for mobile broadband services than anything else.

One of the intriguing consequences of the move could be actually to lessen the take from the auction process. Given the implied constraints on the spectrum’s most effective use, it is entirely possible that fewer bidders might now enter the race. Usually, less competition would be assumed to entail a lower price - although if a reduced band of bidders take heed of Ofcom’s suggestion that better mobile broadband services could be offered at lower cost, they could conceivably all decide to risk more.

Unfortunately, we are going to have to wait until 2010 to find out the result. As part of this week’s announcement, Ofcom confirmed, as most of the industry was expecting, that the auctions were now not going to take place this summer, as originally planned, but next year.

French government snubs CSA and confirms allocation of 790-862MHz band to mobile broadband

It looks as though the French government has ignored the pleas of its TV regulator, the CSA, to take its hands off the 790-862MHz frequency band, the lower portion of which the watchdog wanted to reserve for digital TV post analogue switchoff.

Yesterday, prime minister François Fillon held a ministerial summit at which an updated version of France’s digital plan (France numérique 2012) was announced. The press release put out afterwards (NB, a PDF) reveals that Fillon signed a document just before Christmas mandating the allocation of the 790-862MHz sub-band to mobile broadband. As the CSA feared, this chops a sizeable chunk - 40MHz - off the UHF spectrum that was previously to have been reserved for TV-based services, which runs from 470-830MHz.

It’s possible that the CSA (and any other opponents) could have one more bite at the cherry. Fillon has asked ARCEP (the telecoms regulator) to put out to public consultation by the end of February “the conditions and the modalities of a joint request for proposals for the 780-862 MHz and 2.6GHz bands”, with the objective of attributing the frequencies by the end of this year (2.6GHz is another frequency destined for mobile broadband use).

Opponents of the measure probably wouldn’t be able to reverse that decision, but they could in their consultation responses request that bidders for the 780-862MHz slot be forced to take appropriate measures to protect TV services in adjacent UHF frequencies from interference, something UK regulator Ofcom has proposed in its own consultations about the Digital Dividend. This could be expensive to carry out in practice and could act as a possible ‘spoiler’ for new entrants.

Other measures announced yesterday by Fillon include the creation of a new government working-party on mobile TV, tasked to establish in concert with stakeholders, between now and the end of March, “a viable economic model for mobile TV, with a view to a rapid rollout of the corresponding infrastructures.”

The announcement represents a tacit admission by the government that the French DVB-H project has so far been a failure. ConnectedTV thought the original plans were a recipe for disaster because of their failure to require mobile TV players to meet any targets for comprehensive coverage or indoor reception. The government, however, seems to think that it’s the business model which is at fault - something ConnectedTV has also been banging on about for some time. Either way, it ain’t working.

French government one of few to have accepted ITU recommendation to allocate DTT spectrum to mobile broadband

This piece from the International Herald Tribune puts the French debate over mobile broadband’s potential cannibalisation of DTT frequencies in context.

It seems the French government is one of the few European administrations (the others being the Finnish, Swedish and Swiss authorities) to have agreed to an ITU recommendation in 2007 that its members should set aside some of their UHF frequencies for mobile broadband - this despite subsequent plans to allocate these to DTT.

The IHT article quotes a Nokia Siemens executive who points out that a wireless broadband network transmitting over UHF frequencies rather than the current 2.1GHz band used in Europe would require 75% fewer base stations to cover the same area.

The article also notes that while the European Commission is in favour of a harmonised mobile broadband frequency, the spectrum experts’ group that advises it, the Radio Spectrum Policy Group, is split. Moreover, the EU’s council of ministers has rejected a plan by Viviane Reding, the EU’s telecoms commissioner, to give the EC a role in co-ordinating spectrum at a pan-European level. (Reding is on record as advocating a co-ordinated frequency band for European mobile TV services).

This one will run and run….