TRAI Seeks Recommendations for Auction of Spectrum in New Frequency Ranges

These frequencies will be used by the telcos alongside other mmWave frequencies available in India to offer private network services to enterprises. It is highly unlikely that this set of frequencies will benefit the consumers directly. A total of 4000 MHz of frequencies are available in the spectrum range.

Highlights

  • The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI), recently released a consultation paper for the auction of spectrum in new frequency ranges.
  • A consultation paper titled, 'Auction of Spectrum in 37-37.5 GHz, 37.5-40 GHz and 42.5-43.5 GHz bands Identified for IMT', has been released by the telecom regulator.
  • TRAI is accepting written comments on the paper from the stakeholders till May 2, 2024, and counter-comments by May 16, 2024.

Follow Us

trai seeks recommendations for auction of spectrum

The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI), recently released a consultation paper for the auction of spectrum in new frequency ranges. The regulatory body, upon the request of the Department of Telecommunications (DoT), is seeking recommendations on auctioning frequencies in the following range - 37-37.5 GHz, 37.5-40 GHz, and 42.5-43.5 GHz.




A consultation paper titled, 'Auction of Spectrum in 37-37.5 GHz, 37.5-40 GHz and 42.5-43.5 GHz bands Identified for IMT', has been released by the telecom regulator. TRAI is accepting written comments on the paper from the stakeholders till May 2, 2024, and counter-comments by May 16, 2024.

These frequencies will be used by the telcos alongside other mmWave frequencies available in India to offer private network services to enterprises. It is highly unlikely that this set of frequencies will benefit the consumers directly. A total of 4000 MHz of frequencies are available in the spectrum range.

Read More - Spectrum Auction 2024: Minimum Rollout Obligation for 5G Spectrum

In 37-37.5 GHz, about 500 MHz of spectrum is available in each LSA (licensed service area), 2500 MHz is available in the 37.5-40 GHz band and 1000 MHz is available in the 42.5-43.5 GHz band. These frequencies can be used for IMT services as well as by satcom (satellite communication) service providers for gateway links.

TRAI wants to understand whether the entire quantum of spectrum available in the frequency ranges should be put into auction for IMT services. Further, what should be the time range for which these frequencies should be given to the telcos via the auction? Other things such as the block size, spectrum cap, and more are being discussed in this consultation paper. Industry stakeholders can now submit their views or comments.

It is worth noting that the DoT has already announced a spectrum auction for India on June 6, 2024. This set of frequencies are not going to be a part of the upcoming auction. For more details about the upcoming spectrum in India in 2024, refer to the link below.

Read More - India Spectrum Auction 2024: Details of Spectrum Put To Auction

Reported By

Editor in Chief

Tanay is someone with whom you can chill and talk about technology and life. A fitness enthusiast and cricketer, he loves to read and write.

Recent Comments

Shivraj Roy :

cmon airtel do something publicaly either roll out 5G standalone for fwa or give 3.3TB limit for airfiber again

Airtel Expands FWA Coverage in Q2FY25 and Optimises CPE Costs

TheAndroidFreak :

Above phone got killed in a day unless you want stock Android experience.

OnePlus 13 and Xiaomi 15 to Feature Qualcomm Snapdragon 8…

TheAndroidFreak :

Off Topic : Apple-designed 5G modem AI Sub -10GHZ 20Gbps A19 pro SOC chip: 7-core CPU?7-core GPU USB 3.2 20Gbps…

OnePlus 13 and Xiaomi 15 to Feature Qualcomm Snapdragon 8…

TheAndroidFreak :

Off Topic : Vivo X200 Pro Battery life.

OnePlus 13 and Xiaomi 15 to Feature Qualcomm Snapdragon 8…

abhijith :

No bsnl now gaining it’s momentum.. according to social media i saw people ported into bsnl feels they are struggling..…

Has BSNL Lost a Golden Opportunity

Load More
Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments