Los Angeles Times

Wireless carriers and airlines clash over 5G rollout

As aircraft industry warns new signals may interfere with planes’ electronic­s, telecom giants forge ahead.

- Bloomberg

A struggle between wireless carriers and airlines over the phone industry’s new use of airwaves is set to heat up, possibly in court, as AT&T Inc. and Verizon Communicat­ions Inc. forge ahead with their 5G rollout plans.

The carriers vowed Sunday to launch their new 5G services Jan. 5, defying requests from U.S. transporta­tion officials who back claims that the signals might interfere with aircraft electronic­s. Without interventi­on from courts or federal agencies, service is about to begin, with potentiall­y unpredicta­ble effects on air travel.

At issue are more than $80 billion worth of airwaves purchased by the wireless carriers last year. These socalled C-band frequencie­s are near enough to signals used by the radar altimeters on planes to potentiall­y interfere with landings, according to airlines and jet manufactur­ers. Wireless providers say there’s enough separation.

On Sunday, the wireless carriers, while still going fullthrott­le toward their 5G launch, said they might create exclusion zones around airports, similar to those used in France. In such places, they would hold off on installing C-band transmitte­rs for six months.

As a condition of the offer, the airline group and the wireless industry would work together toward a solution and not escalate the battle.

“AT&T and especially Verizon paid dearly for their C-band spectrum and are rightfully upset at the fact that the government is essentiall­y trying to renegotiat­e the deployment,” said John Byrne, an analyst at GlobalData.

The airline group says that if the carriers go ahead with the 5G launch as planned, it could force schedule changes and cancellati­ons that affect “as many as 345,000 passenger flights.”

The fight could go in a variety of directions.

The airline group could accept the six-month pause and work out network power levels and altimeter equipment safeguards.

The Federal Aviation Administra­tion could reject the compromise and issue an emergency request to the Federal Communicat­ions Commission to delay the 5G launch.

The FAA or the Transporta­tion Department could file a motion, as early as this week, in court seeking a stay to prevent the launch of the C-band service.

New Street Research analyst Blair Levin, a former lawyer at the FCC, said he’s seen a gradual de-escalation of the conflict in recent weeks, according to a note Monday. For example, the airline industry’s threat of a “massive” shutdown of flights has now been quantified at what he estimates is 4%.

The aviation industry has asked the FCC to delay the rollout. If that’s rejected, they’ll go to the courts, Levin said.

“The action will be confusing, but we feel confident that the result of all the actions will be, at worst, a nonmateria­l short delay,” Levin wrote.

Bloomberg Intelligen­ce analyst Matthew Schettenhe­lm also sees limited damage to the wireless carriers, according to a note Monday.

“We would view the filing of any lawsuits as efforts to improve leverage in negotiatio­ns rather than as severe threats to the carriers’ Cband investment­s,” Schettenhe­lm wrote.

The carriers say the Cband rollout is a national priority, citing not only the more than $80 billion paid for the licenses, but also the race with China on 5G and the crucial connection that has proved essential for customers during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Meanwhile, the wireless carriers are facing their own competitiv­e pressure to get C-band 5G service up and running. The airwaves offer the kind of capacity and speeds that can create new revenue from services such as wireless home internet and semiautono­mous connected cars.

AT&T and Verizon are also in a desperate race to catch up with T-Mobile US Inc. in the 5G race. T-Mobile has more than a year’s head start on the build-out of these mid-band networks.

Now’s the time to move, said Byrne of GlobalData.

AT&T and Verizon “have concluded that they are in a strong position to push back right now and are in a rare position of alignment on an important issue for both companies,” he said.

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? WIRELESS carriers said they might create exclusion zones around airports. Above, the L.A. skyline in 2019.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times WIRELESS carriers said they might create exclusion zones around airports. Above, the L.A. skyline in 2019.

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