INTERNET service providers (ISPs) like Sify and Spectranet are up in arms following the government’s decision to take back the 2.5 GHz WiMAX spectrum allotted to them. ISPs claim they had already firmed up investment plans and ordered equipment when the Department of Telecom (DoT) shot a letter asking them to return the spectrum. The ISP Association is going to court over the government’s decision.
“We will be going to court against the government’s notice. We had already started our commercial pilots and will incur a commercial loss due to the government’s decision. Now, auctioning of the spectrum could lead to inflation in internet service charges, which is not a good thing for India as we are still poorly developed in terms of broadband penetration,” says Sify’s president for consumer infrastructure Naresh Ajwani.
The government had allotted 2.5 GHz spectrum (for mobile wireless broadband) in 2003 to seven players including Bharti, R-Com, HCL Infinet, Sify and Spectranet. But now the government has issued them a notice to return the spectrum. The government plans to put forth the 2.5 GHz spectrum for auction for a base price of about Rs 550 crore. It will be about one-fourth the bidding price which is fixed at about Rs 2,200 crore for a pan-India licence, according to DoT guidelines released on Friday.
“The government should come forward and talk to industry players to resolve this tangle. Some players who have already started offering wireless broadband to corporate customers based on the spectrum allotted and ordered equipment will suffer a loss. There’s no way any ISP will be able to shell out Rs 550 crore for a WiMAX spectrum,” says advisor to Spectranet Amitabh Singhal. “It’s like changing the rules of the game just when a match is going to start. It will only lead to increase in valuations of universal access licence holders (UASL) or the telecom operators, who will hoard the WiMAX spectrum. We will be going to court against the DoT decision,” said Internet Service Providers Association of India president Rajesh Charria.