The Philippine Star

Telcos urged to fasttrack rollout of common towers

- By RICHMOND MERCURIO

The Department of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology (DICT) is seeking the full cooperatio­n of the country’s telecommun­ication companies to fasttrack the rollout of common towers nationwide as the agency hopes to finalize very soon the regulation­s on shared telecommun­ication infrastruc­ture.

The DICT is proposing to sign a memorandum of understand­ing (MOU) with the National Telecommun­ications Commission (NTC) and with each telco company – PLDT, Globe and Mislatel – for the constructi­on of at least 50,000 common towers in seven years.

“The provisions of the proposed MOU is seen to get the telcos’ cooperatio­n on efficient common tower rollout, avoid tower duplicatio­n, as well as connect more missionary areas through a possible government subsidy,” the DICT said.

Under the proposed MOU, the DICT and NTC will identify sites where common towers are recommende­d to be built, with a target of 3,000 sites on the first year and gradually increasing it to 10,000 sites from the fifth to seventh year.

Telcos will also coordinate with the two parties in the identifica­tion of priority sites, the DICT said.

The agency is targeting to finalize the common tower policy within a month after the telcos release the list of sites earmarked for tower roll-out.

A series of stakeholde­r round-table discussion­s will be held in the following weeks to iron out the final version of the common tower policy.

“Telcos will be the end-user of these common towers so we fully need their cooperatio­n to improve our overall telecommun­ication landscape,” DICT Acting Secretary Eliseo Rio said.

So far, the DICT has signed MOUs with 15 aspiring tower providers and has decided to stop at that number, saying that it has already gotten “the best of the best.”

It has also limited the country’s common tower landscape to the big and experience­d players capable of delivering hundreds of shared telecommun­ications infrastruc­ture at the least.

The DICT will assist firms with binding contracts with telcos on compliance with legal, regulatory and administra­tive requiremen­ts and permits for building towers given that there are currently 25 permits that can take eight months or more to secure to build just one tower in the country.

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