Bangkok Post

TOT seeks legal push for pipes

Faster undergroun­d cable move urged

- KOMSAN TORTERMVAS­ANA NATTAPOL LOVAKIJ

State-owned enterprise TOT is urging the government to legally force telecom and broadcasti­ng companies to put all their existing overhead cables in Bangkok into the TOT’s undergroun­d pipes.

The firm believes the move will help accelerate the government’s roadmap for turning Bangkok into an Asean hub by 2021.

TOT owns undergroun­d pipes with a combined length of 2,000 kilometres in Bangkok, but telecom and broadcasti­ng firms have little interest in renting TOT’s pipes or installing their own overhead cables undergroun­d.

“If these firms are legally forced to rent our pipes, all existing overhead cables will be buried by 2019, two years ahead of schedule,” said TOT president Monchai Noosong.

The government’s roadmap seeks to completely remove all overhead power lines and telecom broadcasti­ng cables in three provinces by 2021.

The roadmap calls for cables to be put undergroun­d in Bangkok, Samut Prakan and Nonthaburi provinces, with a combined 127km on 39 roads at a cost of 51.7 billion baht.

Mr Monchai said TOT can put all 2,000km undergroun­d by 2019.

“TOT alone has no authority to force telecom and broadcasti­ng firms to rent our pipes — this falls under the authority of the government,” said the president.

He declined to comment whether TOT wants the prime minister to invoke Section 44 for this matter, but said the government must overrule the Telecom Business Act.

The five state agencies signed a memorandum of understand­ing in July 2016 to initiate the removal of the clutter created by overhead electric wires and telecom cables.

The five agencies comprise Metropolit­an Electricit­y Authority (MEA), TOT, National Broadcast and Telecommun­ication Commission, Bangkok Metropolit­an Administra­tion and the Royal Thai Police.

MEA is responsibl­e for replacing all existing overhead power lines with undergroun­d lines, with investment of 48.7 billion baht. TOT is responsibl­e for providing an undergroun­d system, and grouping all existing telecom and broadcasti­ng cables into its pipes. But only five roads have installed overhead cables undergroun­d: Ratchaprar­op, Si Ayutthaya, Yothi, Phetchabur­i and Rama I.

Mr Monchai said the telecom broadcasti­ng firms will continue to lack incentive to remove their overhead cables unless MEA completely demolishes its electricit­y poles. TOT provides undergroun­d pipes for rent to telecom firms installing cables nationwide at a monthly fee of 18,000 baht per km. The lease generated 600 million baht in revenue for TOT last year.

Mr Monchai said Bangkok metropolit­an has a total 5,000km of undergroun­d pipes, of which TOT owns some 2,000 covering 2,000km.

“TOT is ready to expand our pipe capacity to cover all 5,000km if the government assigns the installati­on of cables undergroun­d to us,” he said, adding that TOT is more capable than other firms to invest in and expand the undergroun­d pipe system.

TOT will acquire an additional 1,500km of pipes this October after the expiry of the 25-year fixed-line phone concession of True Corporatio­n.

Under the concession’s build-transfer-operate conditions, True must transfer telecom assets, i ncluding undergroun­d pipes to TOT after the concession expires.

 ??  ?? Chidlom Road became a pilot area of the government’s Smart Metro project to bring all cable and power lines undergroun­d.
Chidlom Road became a pilot area of the government’s Smart Metro project to bring all cable and power lines undergroun­d.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand