Telecom minister says spectrum auction was not a failure

telecom-minister-manoj-sinha-on-spectrum-auction
Telecom minister Manoj Sinha said on Friday that spectrum auction — which mobilised $9.8 billion against a target of $85 billion — was not a failure.

“It is highest ever sale in the last four years of auctioning. In this year we sold around 965 MHz of spectrum,” Sinha said at a press conference.

He also said this particular auction could not be compared with those in previous years where there were many licence renewal cases. “This was not an auction for survival. This auction will help companies strengthen its network.”

The minister, of course, glossed over the fact that only 41 percent of the 2,354 MHz on offer was sold. Also, compared to the total expected revenue of Rs 5.66 lakh crore ($88.5 billion), only about 11.6 percent or Rs 65,789 crore ($9.8 billion) was raised in 31 rounds of bidding. Most industry players agree that this could hardly be called a success.

In 2012, the government auctioned 390 MHZ, out of which it sold 127.50 MHz (32.6 percent); in 2013, of 195 MHZ on offer, it sold 30 MHz (15.4 percent); in 2014, 431.20 MHz was put on block and 353.20 MHz (82 percent) was picked up and in 2015, 470.75 MHz was offered, out of which 418.05 (89 percent) MHz was sold.

The auction’s failure has been attributed to the high reserve price decided by the regulator and approved by the central government.

“The auction was conducted in a smooth and transparent way and after this auction there will be no such thing like call drops,” the minister said.

The auction was held for seven bands –700 MHz, 800 MHz, 900 MHz, 1,800 MHz, 2,100 MHz, 2,300 MHz and 2,500 MHz. There were no takers for 700 MHz and 900 MHz — as experts and the industry alike had warned.

The total upfront payment due to the government from this auction is around Rs 32,000 crore.

Talking about the high price of 700 MHz band, which saw no takers, the minister said perhaps pricing was an issue an “appropriate eco-system for 700 MHz is also needed”.

For the Delhi circle, the reserve price for 700 MHz was pegged at Rs 1,595 crore per MHz — which was the highest. For pan-India, the reserve price was Rs 11,485 crore per MHz. Of the 770 MHz on offer, none was picked up.

Asked whether the government’s budgeted target of Rs 98,994.93 crore from auction procedures this fiscal (till March 31, 2017) will be met, Sinha said: “Largely, it will be achieved.”

IANS

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Latest

More like this
Related

Swisscom backs 6,000 mobile tower JV in Italy to accelerate 5G rollout and cut costs

Swisscom has announced a telecom tower initiative in Italy,...

AT&T Launches Unified AI-Powered App to Simplify Customer Experience

AT&T has begun rolling out its new flagship mobile...

Australia Mobile Services Market: Telstra, Optus, and TPG Drive 5G Growth and Rising Data Revenue

Australia’s mobile services market is dominated by three nationwide...

Telco Channel Strategy 2026: Partner Programs, IT-Telco Bundling and M&A Set to Transform the Industry

Telecommunications providers and their ecosystem partners are entering a...