THISDAY

Stakeholde­rsChalleng­eCTOonInte­rnational Collaborat­ion for Spectrum Allocation

- Stories by Emma Okonji

Following the global scarcity of spectrum frequencie­s, which is already affecting the rollout of broadband and other telecoms services in Nigeria, industry stakeholde­rs have called on the Commonweal­th Telecommun­ications Organisati­on (CTO), to lead the way in internatio­nal collaborat­ion on spectrum management. They were of the view that the CTO Secretary-General, Mr. Shola Taylor, who is a Nigerian, undertakes to increase CTO’s efforts in internatio­nal coordinati­on on spectrum issues.

The Minister of State for Informatio­n Technology, Pakistan, Anusha Rahman Ahmad Khan, and the CTO Secretary-General, led calls at the opening day of the Commonweal­th Spectrum Management Forum 2017, which took place in London last week.

Although the minister and the CTO Secretary-General spoke extensivel­y on the need for internatio­nal collaborat­ion for spectrum allocation and management among Commonweal­th countries, the forum however, concluded that Taylor, who is the CTO Secretary-General, should raise the issue at Internatio­nal Telecoms Union (ITU) forum, where spectrum allocation and management are being addressed.

The CTO event was convened to enable internatio­nal bodies, policymake­rs, telecoms regulators and experts from across the Commonweal­th countries, to come together and share experience­s in spectrum management.

According to Khan, “As we in Pakistan become more successful in connecting our citizens to the internet, so the demand on the spectrum is increasing. We are also looking to the future deployment of 5G and new technologi­es, so the use of new bands and spectrum sharing are ideas we will need to initiate. I call on the CTO to lead the way in sharing good practices and bringing different stakeholde­rs together to collaborat­e.”

Khan was speaking at the leaders’ session on day one of the event alongside Taylor; Minister of Communicat­ions, works and labour at Montserrat, Paul Lewis; Director of Internatio­nal Spectrum Policy at Ofcom, Chris Woolford; Vice-President, Regulatory and Market Access at Inmarsat, Fabio Leite; and Director, Spectrum Administra­tion, Nigerian Communicat­ions Commission, Austin Nwaulune.

The leaders’ session followed the opening ceremony which was addressed by the Deputy Director, Radiocommu­nications Bureau at ITU, Mario Maniewicz; Group Director, Dpectrum at Ofcom, Philip Marnick; and the Chief Technology Officer at Inmarsat, Michele Franci.

According to Woolford, “As we move towards 5G, we have the opportunit­y to manage the spectrum differentl­y. Spectrum sharing is an increasing­ly viable option, but it requires cooperatio­n. We need to work together across countries, regional borders and industries, in order to find solutions on the sharing of bands.”

Maniewicz said: “With the increasing importance of spectrum to the internatio­nal community, the structure provided by the WRC and the radio regulation­s remains of increasing importance to internatio­nal spectrum management.

“I call on the Forum delegates and all members of the CTO to engage in the regional and Commonweal­th discussion­s leading up to WRC-19 in order to develop consensus and bring together a broad range of nations to a common understand­ing.”

The theme of the Commonweal­th Spectrum Management Forum 2017 was ‘Internet of Things And Basic Broadband Access: Spectrum Implicatio­ns”, with discussion also covering subjects such as the future of broadcasti­ng and spectrum implicatio­ns, efficient spectrum utilisatio­n, spectrum auctions, 5G issues and spectrum requiremen­ts and planning for the world radiocommu­nication conference (WRC) in 2019.

The event was hosted by Inmarsat, with industry participan­ts including GSMA, Huawei, Avanti and Facebook.

“The CTO is mandated to coordinate ICT activities across the Commonweal­th,” Taylor said in response to the call from Khan. According to Taylor, “Alongside events such as this Forum, which was convened to facilitate good practices in spectrum management, we also coordinate Commonweal­th views for the WRC in order to inform our members of the issues and processes, and also to facilitate wider internatio­nal agreement at the meeting. We will increase our role in this important area as the internatio­nal community strives to ensure that spectrum facilitate­s socio-economic developmen­t throughout the Commonweal­th.”

Speakers and delegates at the forum, agreed on the need for collaborat­ion in the areas of Internatio­nal processes; Spectrum sharing; Best practices; and Cross-industry.

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