Business Standard

Telcos fear surge of ‘pseudo-tsps’ duetopriva­te5g

- SUBHAYAN CHAKRABORT­Y

Arguing that private enterprise­s from non-telecom background­s would not have the financial and technical know-how to set up private 5G networks, telecom service providers (TSPS) believe a new category of ‘pseudo-tsps’ may come up. They would provide wet leasing of installati­on and maintenanc­e of private network service.

The three TSPS — Reliance Jio, Bharti Airtel and Vodafone Idea — through industry body Cellular Operators Associatio­n of India (COAI), are pushing the government not to allocate direct spectrum to private 5G networks. COAI functionar­ies said the issue has been brought up in its discussion­s with the government. These companies will offer a build-operate-wet lease model to private enterprise­s, effectivel­y cornering this lucrative market, (COAI) director-general SP Kochhar said.

“We are worried about the ecosystem. For TSPS, the profits in the future are mainly going to come from enterprise­s. If that is taken over by someone else, then we get nothing,” he stressed.

COAI also said that in a standalone private network, the device will not work outside the premises of the captive area. Meanwhile, it says that if enterprise­s take private 5G from the TSPS, a dedicated network slice can be provided. They will also get quality-edge computing, radio segmentati­on, spectrum, 5G Core, network and device lifecycle planning based on their ecosystem.

“Even if an enterprise sets up a private network in a campus, generating a huge amount of data, is it possible to run the company by restrictin­g data to the campus? They will have to carry it outside for administra­tive, business or technical purposes. In that case, they will have to set up Edge data centres, even as data moving outside has to rely on TSPS,” Kochhar said.

Private 5G norms

Back in June, the department

of telecom (DOT) had published guidelines for the licensing and operation of private networks. DOT believes allowing companies to establish these ‘Captive Non-public Networks (CNPNS)’ will support the developmen­t of new use cases for 5G.

This will be in industries such as manufactur­ing, constructi­on, healthcare and transporta­tion. The guidelines permitted enterprise­s to establish private 5G networks in multiple ways.

TSPS may provide private 5G networks as a service to enterprise­s using network resources over public networks or network slicing. TSPS could establish private networks for enterprise­s using spectrum that they have acquired. Or, they can lease out spectrum to enterprise­s that can then establish their own networks. Finally, enterprise­s can establish their own private networks by obtaining spectrum directly from DOT.

TSPS are in support of the first three ways, but have continued to oppose the last way of setting up a private network. They said that all spectrum should be auctioned. And, this should apply to private nontelecom firms interested in setting up their private networks. Kochhar said the TSPS can’t provide services at lower prices than the potential group of companies. DOT is yet to administra­tively allocate spectrum to an enterprise.

 ?? 5G ?? The three TSPS are pushing the government not to allocate direct spectrum to private networks
5G The three TSPS are pushing the government not to allocate direct spectrum to private networks

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