Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Cable providers want car airwaves

- TODD SHIELDS AND RYAN BEENE

WASHINGTON — Twenty years ago, automakers won exclusive rights to use a portion of U.S. airwaves for ultra-safe “talking cars” that would communicat­e with one another wirelessly, see around corners and avert collisions.

That future hasn’t arrived. And now with just one talking vehicle on the roads — the Cadillac CTS sedan — cable providers want to loosen automakers’ hold on the frequencie­s.

NCTA-The Internet & Television Associatio­n, a trade group with members including top U.S. cable provider Comcast Corp., on Tuesday asked regulators to open those airwaves for use by Wi-Fi signals that will shoulder more and more of cable subscriber­s’ traffic.

“Use of this band has failed,” the associatio­n said in a petition to the Federal Communicat­ions Commission. The U.S. “can no longer afford” to allocate those airwaves exclusivel­y for vehicle-to-vehicle communicat­ions “with the hope that the next twenty years will somehow be different than the last two decades of stagnation,” the group said.

Cable providers want the FCC to begin a new proceeding to allocate all or a large portion of the 5.9 gigahertz spectrum for so-called unlicensed use by Wi-Fi devices to alleviate a shortage of available bandwidth.

The request reflects a scramble by industries for wireless footholds as digital technology transforms everything from cars to video feeds and household appliances. The competitio­n to serve millions of connected devices, including mobile phones, has placed a premium on controllin­g airwaves.

Automakers led by General Motors Co. and Toyota Motor Corp. have been major proponents of the technology that relays data about vehicle speed and direction wirelessly between cars and roadside infrastruc­ture to prevent collisions.

“Automakers support preserving the 5.9 GHz spectrum band for transporta­tion safety applicatio­ns intended to prevent crashes and save lives,” said Scott Hall, a spokesman for the Alliance of Automobile Manufactur­ers, a trade associatio­n for a dozen carmakers including GM and Toyota.

“Any unlicensed use in the 5.9 GHz band should not be permitted unless it is proven it will not cause harmful interferen­ce to these safety systems,” Hall added.

Under President Barack Obama’s administra­tion, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion proposed requiring so-called vehicle-to-vehicle radios on all new automobile­s by 2023, citing agency research projecting that it could prevent 80 percent of all non-impaired collisions.

The mandate has stalled under the Trump administra­tion. The highway agency has taken no action since a comment period on the proposed mandate closed in April 2017.

“Without the 5.9 GHz band, we lose many of the lifesaving benefits of connected vehicles,” Shailen Bhatt, president of ITS America, a trade associatio­n, said in a statement. The group supports reserving the spectrum for connected vehicle safety technologi­es.

Cable providers for years have asked the FCC to allow broader use of the so-called talking car airwaves. That particular zone is ideal for carrying Wi-Fi traffic that handles an increasing portion of cable subscriber­s’ data, according to cable providers.

For instance, Charter Communicat­ions Inc., the secondlarg­est U.S. cable provider, in July told Congress its Wi-Fi network serves more than 280 million wireless devices. Opening the 5.9 GHz airwaves is a “gateway to revolution­ized Wi-Fi speeds and innovation,” Craig Cowden, Charter’s senior vice president of wireless technology, told lawmakers.

Proponents of expanded Wi-Fi capacity hope to take advantage of the auto industry’s limited progress getting vehicle-to-vehicle safety systems into the marketplac­e.

Industry, government and university researcher­s have done extensive testing of the Wi-Fi-like vehicle-to-vehicle communicat­ions signals, but only GM produces a car with the technology.

In addition, some carmakers including Daimler AG, BMW AG and Ford Motor Co. want to use cellular signals, rather than the “talking car” technology.

Ford spokesman Sinead Phipps said company tests show that cellular-based connected vehicle systems, or CV2X in industry parlance, perform better and create a path to adopt higher-speed 5G cellular signals.

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