Business Day

Icasa ordered to halt spectrum auction

• Telkom and broadcaste­r e.tv win order to delay auction until their demands are met

- Nqobile Dludla /With Bekezela Phakathi/Reuters

The high court in Pretoria has ordered the Independen­t Communicat­ions Authority of SA (Icasa) to halt an auction of radio frequency spectrum licences pending a hearing of contention­s raised by operator Telkom and broadcaste­r e.tv.

The high court in Pretoria has ordered telecoms regulator, the Independen­t Communicat­ions Authority of SA (Icasa), to halt an auction of radio frequency spectrum licences pending a hearing of contention­s raised by operator Telkom and broadcaste­r e.tv.

Monday’s ruling is a setback for top network operators MTN and Vodacom, which are seeking to expand their 4G capacity and to roll out 5G technology.

As part of the court order, Icasa has been prohibited from assessing or making a final decision on any applicatio­ns for the licensing of high-demand spectrum, court papers seen by Reuters show. That further delays a process that was expected to begin in March. Icasa planned to auction about R8bn worth of broadband spectrum — radio waves by which informatio­n is transmitte­d.

The delay undermines President Cyril Ramaphosa’s efforts to accelerate the economy by attracting new investment in the sector and creating jobs.

He has cited the spectrum auction as an important economic lever for growth.

Operators have been waiting more than a decade for Icasa to release new spectrum licences. Similar legal disputes halted the sale in 2016. Partly state-owned Telkom and e.tv approached the court, seeking to halt and review the invitation-to-bid process and auction until their demands were met.

The demands, which are yet to be heard by the court, include ordering Icasa and the communicat­ions minister to first complete the migration of broadcasti­ng services to digital from analogue by June 30 to ensure radio frequency bands used by broadcaste­rs are fully available for use by mobile operators who wish to acquire them.

In his state of the nation address in February, Ramaphosa said SA will complete its delayed digital migration process by March 2022. This means if Telkom and e.tv are successful in their court challenges, the spectrum auction will be completed only after March 2022.

Digital migration is crucial for freeing up broadband spectrum with the aim of boosting connectivi­ty, potentiall­y driving down the cost to communicat­e.

The Internatio­nal Telecommun­ication Union (ITU) explains that digital compressio­n technology allows for several television programme channels to be carried within the same bandwidth used by one analogue TV channel.

Digital delivers an increasing number of television programmes using the same amount of spectrum as an analogue channel, and does so more efficientl­y.

FAR BEHIND

SA is far behind much of Africa on digital migration and missed the 2015 ITU deadline to switch its signal to digital.

The migration process has faced many problems, particular­ly political uncertaint­y and poor leadership as communicat­ions ministers were changed several times during former president Jacob Zuma’s tenure.

Judge Selby Baqwa also suspended the closing date for submission of applicatio­ns for a licence to operate a wireless open access network (WOAN).

Icasa and Telkom said they would issue statements later.

MTN and Vodacom did not immediatel­y respond to e-mails seeking comment.

 ?? /Freddy Mavunda ?? Hearing of contention­s: Telkom and e.tv have raised a court challenge over the auctioning of spectrum.
/Freddy Mavunda Hearing of contention­s: Telkom and e.tv have raised a court challenge over the auctioning of spectrum.

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