Business Standard

Telecom Commission sticks to its model for calculatin­g SUC

- KIRAN RATHEE New Delhi, 25 July

The Telecom Commission has decided to continue with its earlier model for calculatin­g spectrum usage charges (SUC) using the weighted average, but has added a condition that annual charges for any operator will not fall below 3 per cent of adjusted gross revenue. For new spectrum auctions, a flat rate will be charged.

The Telecom Commission has decided to continue with its earlier model for calculatin­g spectrum usage charges (SUC) using the weighted average, but it has added a condition that the annual charge for any operator will not fall below three per cent.

For new spectrum auctions, a flat rate of three per cent will be charged, and for the remaining airwaves, the weighted average method will apply.

The Telecom Commission, the highest decision-making body of the department of telecommun­ications, decided to overlook the recommenda­tions by the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (Trai) for calculatin­g SUC incorporat­ing the market-determined price and technical efficiency of a band.

Sources in the DoT said the panel’s decision would create a level-playing field among operators and also increase the revenue of the government.

The decision will now be placed before the Cabinet for approval next week after which a notice inviting applicatio­n (NIA) will be issued. After the issuance of the NIA, spectrum auction is likely to start in 45 days. The government expects to garner ~5.66 lakh crore at base price from the spectrum auction, the biggest ever. “We have to maintain a level playing field and then move towards a level of three per cent, which Trai has been suggesting. The recommenda­tion made by the Telecom Commission earlier will stay.

For new spectrum auctions, a flat rate of three per cent will be charged

For the remaining airwaves, the weighted average method will apply

Govt expects to garner ~5.66 lakh crore at base price from the spectrum auction How much telcos have to pay for 2,300 MHz band Reliance Jio will now have to pay 3.05 per cent, Aircel 3 per cent No change for Airtel A new point has been added that all telecom operators will have to pay three per cent,” an official source said.

Elaboratin­g on the decision, the source said DoT would adopt the weighted average formula as it had calculated in its last proposals to the Cabinet, but if an operator’s SUC fell below three per cent, it would have to pay the government the floor rate.

The SUC issue became complex due to a difference in rates for the 2,300 MHz band and other bands. SUC for the 2,300 MHz band is one per cent while it is higher for other bands. Bharti Airtel, Aircel and Reliance Jio Infocomm won spectrum in the 2,300 MHz band in the 2010 auctions. As the SUC slabs are different for different bands, DoT wanted to simplify things by introducin­g a weighted-average formula. The decision led to SUC for Reliance Jio being 2.88 per cent, Aircel 2.83 per cent and Airtel 3.8 per cent. However, with the panel suggesting a new clause of a minimum three per cent SUC, Reliance Jio will have to pay 3.05 per cent, Aircel three per cent and there will be no change for Airtel. Reliance Jio will have to pay 3.05 per cent because it has spectrum sharing and trading agreements. The decision has no impact on Vodafone, Idea Cellular and other companies, which do not hold spectrum in the 2,300 MHz and 2,600 MHz bands that were auctioned in mid-2010.

Vodafone pays around 4.8 per cent SUC and Idea 4.5 per cent.

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