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ANALYSIS

Digital Switch
Industry is pitching for the 700 Mhz band for allotting digital
dividend as it harmononizes with future technology LTE. Is India
prepared for the the digital switch over?

Heena Jhingan
Friday, September 18, 2009

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Switching to digital TV in India could mean heading towards bridging
the digital divide, this is the word the cellular operators' lobby has
been spreading. Excited that mobile subscriber base in the country
will touch the 500 mn mark any day in this fiscal, the Cellular
Operators' Association of India has been now talking in the tongue
that telecom regulator some years back spoke in. The 3G auction
process is to be completed by the year end, a concern that has been
giving the operators sleepless nights is spectrum crunch.

With newer technologies coming, the mobile broadband usage is expected
to grow exponentially over the next three years, bringing Internet to
more than 1.3 bn people globally by 2012. In India the mobile
broadband will have an opportunity to grow the numbers faster, if more
spectrum becomes available.

TRAI had already sounded alarm long time back over the spectrum
scarcity and recommended that the Government should set up a committee
to develop a roadmap for exploiting the digital dividend whereby
broadcasting services shift from analog to more spectrally efficient
digital bands. This will free up spectrum for mobile services,
especially in rural areas. There have been success stories of moving
to digital TV. In the UK, regulator Ofcom estimated that the
allocation of the digital dividend would provide between euro7.5 bn
and euro15 bn over 20 years for the UK economy alone.

Industry feels allotting digital dividend spectrum to mobile operators
would have a significant positive impact, driving innovation, job
creation, productivity and competitiveness. Backed by GSMA, the
cellular service providers in India are now pitching in for 700 Mhz
for allotting digital dividend. The 700MHz frequency band is the
frequency range between 698MHz-806MHz. The UHF IV and V bands
available with Doordarshan have not been fully used, and this can be
vacated and made available to the operators.

Interestingly, why the industry is eyeing the 700MHz is because the
band has a high propagation characteristic which helps in longer
distance communication. This will reduce the number of base stations,
thus lowering the cost of implementation and maintenance.

TRAI is planning to float a consultation paper on Long Term Evolution.
Industry is hopeful that by 2014 LTE will be a commercial reality.
COAI has recommended 700MHz as a harmonious and cost-effective
spectrum band for LTE. Also this band is critical as it is 70% cheaper
to provide broadband coverage using UHF spectrum than with 2100 MHz
spectrum widely used for mobile broadband today.

It is estimated that the number of transmission towers will reduce
from 1460 to about 600 once the analog switches to digital completely.
Moreover, over using this low frequency spectrum will also help
operators to provide dependable mobile broadband services in building
thus meeting the high expectations of consumers who are getting
accustomed to ubiquitous mobile voice coverage and always on Internet
access.

All said and done, the big question is that if India is prepared for a
switch off the way the US did recently when it moved to digital TV
completely. The digital television broadcasting will demand the users
to either opt for set-top-boxes to be used with their old analog
television set or buy a new digital television set.

The experts suggest India does not require to move on to digital in
one go. It is possible that both systems stay and migration happens
gradually.

What needs to be done is to address the need for sparing the spectrum
for mobile usage, the government will have to work out on a band that
supports future technologies and has social and economical benefits to
country. The industry has suggested that route to digital dividend is
700 Mhz. DoT has suggested a 2017 deadline for the digital switiching
a date by when several countries would have commevcially deployed LTE.

If India does not want to miss the bus as it did for 3G, it must act
now. The government should start working on vacating the spectrum and
explore the option of gradual migration to digital TV.

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