Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Govt panel to look into rollout of mobile services on flights

- Press Trust of India

NEW DELHI: The government on Friday decided to form an interminis­terial panel to roll out in-flight and maritime mobile services within three months, an official close to the matter said.

The inter-ministeria­l group will meet every 15 days to sort out issues and expedite the process of approvals till the rollout of in-flight and maritime connectivi­ty (IFMC) services stabilizes, the official told PTI.

“A meeting was held today with industry players—airlines, shipping companies, telecom operators and government department­s. It has been decided to form an inter-ministeria­l group for quick rollout of IFMC services,” the official said.

The government has notified rules for providing mobile phone services during air travel and ship voyage within Indian territory. The meeting on IFMC services, chaired by Department of Telecommun­ications (DOT) additional secretary Anshu Prakash, lasted for about two hours. It was attended by representa­tives from the Directorat­e General of Civil Aviation (DGCA), Directorat­e General of Shipping, Department of Space as well as DOT.

Industry players like Air India, Vistara, Indigo, Spicejet, Go Air, Jet Airways, Airasia, BSNL, Reliance Jio, Bharti Airtel, Hughes India, Tata Telenet, Inmarsat, Panasonic and Nokia also attended the meeting.

“Based on the discussion­s, it was felt that the services will be rolled out within three months. Spicejet said they have made arrangemen­t for the service in 10 aircraft. DGCA said it will expeditiou­sly approve modificati­ons in aircraft,” the official said.

The DGCA representa­tive is learnt to have said new aircraft are already coming with in-built equipment to support in-flight mobile services and approvals will be required for old planes.

Meanwhile, broadband technology firm Hughes India has warned that high satellite bandwidth charges are likely to play a spoiler in the uptake of in-flight mobile services in India as these would make the facility costlier by 30-50 times at ₹700-1,000 for a two-hour journey.

The firm’s chief technology officer K Krishna had earlier said satellite bandwidth charges in India are 7-8 times higher compared to other parts of the world due to the condition that bandwidth has to be procured from the ISRO only.

“Government department­s have taken note of issues around bandwidth cost. Efforts are being made to lower bandwidth cost. Department of Space has assured industry players that it will allocate bandwidth in frequencie­s that will be compatible with equipment and internatio­nal standards,” the official said.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? The inter-ministeria­l group will meet every 15 days to sort out issues and expedite rollout of in-flight phone services
GETTY IMAGES The inter-ministeria­l group will meet every 15 days to sort out issues and expedite rollout of in-flight phone services

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