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Reliance Jio opposes proposal to fix uniform spectrum usage fees at 3%

Reliance Jio opposes proposal to fix uniform spectrum usage fees at 3%

Reliance Jio Infocomm (RJI), the telecom arm of Reliance Industries Ltd, has objected to the demand for uniform spectrum usage charge (SUC) of three per cent by GSM operators.

Mukesh Ambani, chairman, Reliance Industries Photo: Reuters Mukesh Ambani, chairman, Reliance Industries <em>Photo: Reuters</em>
Reliance Jio Infocomm (RJI), the telecom arm of Reliance Industries Ltd, has objected to the demand for uniform spectrum usage charge (SUC) of three per cent by GSM operators. The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (Trai) has already recommended uniform fees of three per cent.

"Unilateral increase in SUC for BWA spectrum from one per cent to three per cent will be illegal. The government may take appropriate decision on SUC for forthcoming auctions but without altering the present SUC regime, either directly or indirectly, for already allocated or auctioned spectrum," RJI said in a letter sent to the telecom secretary on Monday.

Trai had proposed a uniform fees of three per cent irrespective of the quantum of spectrum held by an operator. Broadband wireless access (BWA) spectrum holders like RJI pay only one per cent SUC. Current players like Vodafone India, Bharti Airtel and Idea Cellular want the fees to be uniform as they pay as much as eight per cent SUC. RJI said that terms and conditions of the 'notice inviting application', the main document of spectrum auctions, are equally binding on both the Department of Telecommunications (DoT) and bidders, and any post facto deviation in auction rules which extends undue benefit to incumbent operators will not stand judicial scrutiny.

RJI said that companies while buying spectrum in the auction factored in conditions, including SUC, in their bid amounts with reasonable expectation that the conditions notified will not be altered. At lower uniform SUC for spectrum that had been auctioned in past, there would have been more participation and bids more aggressive, RJI added. "Therefore, retrospective reduction in the SUC would not only cause huge loss to the government but also would have deprived some of the operators to acquire spectrum through these auctions."

Referring to the submission made by the Cellular Operators Association of India (COAI), Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India and top executives of leading GSM mobile operators, RJI said the representations do not necessarily put forward the correct facts and might mislead the government.

RJI's move comes a day before the Telecom Commission meets to take a view on the fees after which the empowered group of ministers will take a final decision. A decision on the issue is crucial for bidders because a flat fees would encourage operators to buy more spectrum and an escalating charge would discourage them from increasing their spectrum holding.

The ongoing tussle over SUC forced DoT to postpone the auction from January 23 to February 3 next year. DoT estimates that lowering of SUC to three per cent will cause a loss of Rs 3,738 crore to the government over 20 years on renewal of the six licences belonging to Airtel, Vodafone and Loop Mobile due to expire in 2014.

DoT says lowering of SUC to 3% will cause loss of Rs 3,738 cr to the government

Courtesy: Mail Today 

Published on: Dec 31, 2013, 8:30 AM IST
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