Business Standard

Trai proposes ways to ease doing of business in telecom NEW NORMS ON THE CARDS

- KIRAN RATHEE

To improve ease of doing business, the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (Trai) has proposed some new measures.

These include approval to a merged entity within 30 days of a go-ahead from the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT), giving telcos up to a year to surrender or trade excess airwaves in the case of a merger, permitting trading in all bands which have been put on auction, plus easier penalty norms.

If the department of telecommun­ications (DoT) agrees, the proposed mergers of Bharti Airtel-Telenor, Vodafone-Idea Cellular and Bharti Airtel-Tata Teleservic­e’s mobile business would all get approval in a short span. In the past, DoT had taken several months for approving mergers between companies even after a NCLT okay. | Nod to a merged entity within 30 days of a go-ahead from the National Company Law Tribunal | Giving telcos up to a year to surrender or

trade excess airwaves in the case of a merger | Permitting trading in all bands which have been put on auction | Easier penalty norms

For instance, after NCLT approval, the AirtelQual­comm merger approval from DoT took six to seven months. That of Reliance Communicat­ions and Sistema Shyam Teleservic­es took around four months. Industry representa­tives say this delay increases the uncertaint­y and operationa­l cost.

Trai has recommende­d that DoT issue a definite timeline, not exceeding 30 days after NCLT approval, for written approval to transfer or merge licences; it should be part of the Merger & Acquisitio­n guidelines.

And, if a merger results in spectrum holding beyond the permissibl­e cap, the entity should get the option to surrender or trade it within a year. Trai has also proposed that spectrum trading be permitted in all bands put to auction, the permissibl­e block size the same as specified in the notice inviting applicatio­ns for the latest auction.

“DoT should devise a suitable matrix, linking the penalty to the severity of the incident and recurrence of the violation for imposition of financial penalties,” Trai said.

Trai had issued a position paper on ease of doing business in March this year. It asked stakeholde­rs to review the processes and identify bottleneck­s or obstacles that make it difficult to do telecom business in India.

“We are pleased with what Trai has recommende­d. It will go a long way to improve ease of doing business. We wish the proposals are soon adopted and implemente­d by DoT,” said Rajan S Mathews, director-general, Cellular Operators Associatio­n of India.

The regulator has also proposed that the entire process of Standing Advisory Committee on Radio Frequency Allocation clearance, as well as grant of all licences or approvals, be made paperless and be executed end-to-end through the online portal.

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