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View Full Version : Rural areas to get 3G (900Mhz)



3GScottishUser
26th July 2007, 11:33 AM
From Media Guardian (26/07/2007):

The European commission plans to remove limits on how mobile phone firms can use their networks, in a move that could finally bring services such as video calling and mobile TV to rural areas.
Viviane Reding, EU telecoms commissioner and scourge of the operators over their high overseas "roaming" charges, wants to scrap an "outdated" 1987 EU directive that restricts access to the lower band (900MHz) of the radio spectrum to traditional mobile communications.

The change would allow mobile phone companies to use their old, or 2G, networks to run new 3G services. At the height of the dotcom boom the UK's five networks spent £22.5bn buying licences to run 3G services, but take-up has so far been slow.

3G services run over a higher frequency part of the spectrum than traditional mobile phone services. Signals do not travel far from 3G phone masts, making it uneconomical to bring the technology to remote areas. Only 80% of the British population will ever get access, with the bulk of coverage in metropolitan areas.

The commission's move would allow mobile operators to put 3G technology on their existing spectrum. Mobile masts using this bit of the airwaves can transmit signals much further. It would also improve 3G coverage within buildings.

Ofcom plans to consult the industry on so-called "re-farming" of the 2G spectrum in the autumn and a decision on how to do it could be reached as early as next year.

New entrant 3, however, only has a 3G network, which it has spent billions of pounds building. It wants the original four operators - O2, Orange, T-Mobile and Vodafone - to be made to share their old 2G spectrum so 3 can also use it for 3G.

Ms Reding's move is a response to the GSM Association, the operators' global lobby, which estimates that freeing up the 900MHz band - and the other legacy part of the mobile spectrum at 1800MHz - could increase 3G network coverage by 40% and enable 300 million extra EU consumers to use the service.

The operators could reap a benefit 10 times higher than the loss they will incur through the imposition of binding roaming charges, Ms Reding's aides said. They also suggest the move could reduce bills.

Ms Reding said: "Radio spectrum is a crucial economic resource which must be properly managed ... We must facilitate the deployment of mobile communications by allowing new technologies to share spectrum with existing ones."

The move is also a tacit admission by Brussels that the auction system for 3G licences, which made tens of billions for governments, has been a costly failure.

Complete Article: http://media.guardian.co.uk/newmedia/story/0,,2134959,00.html

3g-g
26th July 2007, 07:13 PM
Viviane for President! :p

Ben
27th July 2007, 12:29 AM
Indeed, that woman apparently needs a medal. Lets see how far this one goes! I have no doubt that moving 3G into more robust frequencies would seal the deal on the technology moving forward.