Sun.Star Pampanga

DICT to pursue common tower policy even without 3rd telco

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MANILA -- The Department of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology (DICT) said Saturday it is pushing through with the implementa­tion of its common tower policy even without the entry of a new major telco player.

DICT Acting Secretary Eliseo Rio Jr. said this will allow cell tower firms to build and deploy communicat­ion infrastruc­tures that may be leased to telcos to further improve the delivery of their services to the public.

“We will go ahead with the common tower initiative even if we have only two telcos because the fact remains that we still need an additional 50,000 towers to improve our connectivi­ty,” Rio said in a st at em en t .

“Common towers can bring down the cost of our telecommun­ication services so there is definitely a need for this initiative, whether we have two or three or even four telcos,” he added.

The DICT official made this reaction amid issues regarding the validity of the franchise of the third telco player.

Various lawmakers have expressed concern that Mislatel Consortium, a joint venture of Udenna Corp. of businessma­n Dennis Uy and Chinese state-owned firm China Telecom, has failed to comply with the conditions of its franchise as it has not operated within a year after the franchise was granted and sold 70 percent of its shares without congressio­nal approval.

Mislatel was granted a legislativ­e franchise in 1998 with a specific provision to commence operations within one year from approval.

Rio estimated that the common tower initiative would generate about USD4.4 billion and would create thousands of jobs.

To date, the DICT has common tower provider agreements with local firm ISOC Infrastruc­tures, Inc.; Singapore’s ISON ECP Tower Pte. Ltd.; IHSTowers; Edotco Group; RT Telecom Sdn Bhd of Malaysia; and China Energy Engineerin­g Corp.

The government will provide assistance to the tower firms through facilitati­on of permits, right of way, and providing other government support for infrastruc­ture should they secure a contract with any of the telco operators.

The DICT earlier said the Philippine­s needs additional 50,000 cell towers to be competitiv­e with its neighborin­g countries in providing quality communicat­ion services to the public.

The country has about 16,000 cell sites, the lowest cell density in Asi a.

The lack of cell towers has been identified as one of the barriers to affordable and consistent­ly reliable Internet services in the country. ( PNA)

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