The Philippine Star

Dito commits to proceed with launch next year

- By RICHMOND MERCURIO

The group of businessma­n Dennis Uy and its Chinese partner assured regulators that its telecommun­ications network would be ready for commercial use by March next year or even earlier.

Dito issued the statement after it failed to meet its technical audit target date.

Adel Tamano, chief administra­tive officer of Dito Telecommun­ity, said the company is “moving heaven and earth” to pursue a successful commercial launch of its network by March next year, the latest.

By Jan. 7 next year, the government will conduct a technical audit of Dito to check the company’s capacity to deliver on its first year commitment­s of covering 37 percent of the population and providing 27 Mbps minimum average internet speed.

“We’re not worried. Of course we do not want to fail our technical audit. But even if we do, it doesn’t stop us from having our commercial launch,” Tamano said as he assured the public.

“If you fail the technical audit, what it will mean is either your download speed is not fast enough, or you didn’t cover enough. But that doesn’t stop you from having a commercial launch. You can still launch commercial­ly, meaning you offer your services to the public. And then within that six-month period you will improve your service, improve your coverage, improve your download speed,” he said.

The technical audit of Dito’s network was originally scheduled on July 8, but it was given a six-month extension or by Jan. 7 by the National Telecommun­ications Commission (NTC) to deliver its commitment­s amid the COVID-19 crisis.

Tamano said Dito sought an extension as the lockdowns had become more stringent and getting to the sites became harder.

“The only thing that we asked to be moved was our audit and we cited what is known under the law as a fortuitous event,” he said.

Tamano also clarified that the extension given by the NTC for its technical audit does not affect the number of remediatio­n periods that the company has under its certificat­e of public convenienc­e and necessity (CPCN).

Based on its CPCN, Dito is allowed a period of six months to remedy failure to comply with its commitment­s and will only be allowed two remediatio­ns within its five-year commitment period.

“COVID is not caused by Dito so we could not remedy that action. So our remediatio­n period of two will stay,” Tamano said.

Dito chief technology officer Rodolfo Santiago said the company would need to build around 1,300 towers to meet its initial coverage requiremen­t of 37 percent of the population.

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