Showing posts with label European Commission. Show all posts
Showing posts with label European Commission. Show all posts

Monday, December 30, 2013

Brussels finally gets 4G after politicians relent on tough mobile radiation cap

The Brussels parliament has approved a proposal to raise the maximum allowed radiation levels for mobile antennas, finally allowing telcos to begin rollout of high-speed 4G networks in the Belgian capital.
Brussels has the strictest radiation standards of all of Belgium. In 2007, the Parliament of the Brussels Region of Belgium adopted a three volt per metre exposure limit for mobile phone base stations, a limit 200 times lower than those recommended by the EU and the World Health Organisation — making them not only the toughest across Belgium, but in all of the EU as well.
Whereas most cities in Belgium already have 4G coverage, the cap has to date prevented the rollout of 4G in the city, and so damaged trade in the Belgian capital, according to a report from the Belgian Institute for Postal Services and Telecommunications (BIPT).
"Brussels' current regulations and policy on radiation standards constitute a serious impediment to… the rollout of new mobile technologies, which has had unintended consequences on economic development, job creation, and consumers in the Brussels-Capital region. It seems appropriate to change the current limits," the BIPT said in February of this year.
The radiation cap didn't only raise concerns in the Belgium itself; even European Commission VP Neelie Kroes joined in the discussion, writing to the Brussels authorities on the matter. In her letter, Kroes asks for objective reasons for the extremely low voltage cap in the Brussels region and how it could be justified in relation to European guidelines.

Telcos get ready

In response to all the commotion concerning 4G, the Brussels parliament has now agreed to raise the radiation cap from three volts per metre to six volts per metre, effectively allowing 4G antennas to be rolled out in the city.
With the starting pistol fired on 4G, operators are hoping to launch their networks in Brussels as soon as possible. The rollout of 4G requires 380 additional mobile masts in the capital, which could take years, due to the time it takes to get the necessary paperwork to install them.
To overcome this obstacle, 133 Brussels companies have agreed to rent out the roof of their buildings to Belgian telcos, so that mobile antennas can be set up on there, following a letter by the Belgian economy minister Céline Frémault to do so. This development allows Belgian telcos to rollout 4G as soon as next year.

Source: http://www.zdnet.com/brussels-finally-gets-4g-after-politicians-relent-on-tough-mobile-radiation-cap-7000024218/

 

Monday, December 2, 2013

CTU awards 4G spectrum to Czech incumbents, but newcomers miss out

National regulator the Czech Telecommunication Office (CTU) yesterday issued a press release confirming that the country’s three incumbent mobile network operators – Telefonica O2 CR, T-Mobile Czech Republic and Vodafone Czech Republic – each secured frequencies allowing them to offer fourth-generation (4G) Long Term Evolution (LTE) services in the country. However, the tender failed in its primary task of bringing new competition to the market as two would-be newcomers – Revolution Mobile, previously a subsidiary of the financial groupPPF, and Sazka Communications (formerly known as Tasciane), which is understood to be controlled by local entrepreneur Karel Komarek’s KKCG Group – failed to take frequencies, despite taking part.
The industry watchdog had seen the auction as the ideal vehicle to bring in much needed competition to a sector long dominated by the three big hitters. In its statement yesterday though, it noted that: ‘Despite the fact the fact that CTU created ideal conditions for a third operator to enter the market, both new interested parties, in the end, decided not to join the Czech mobile market’. TeleGeography notes that in the run-up to the auction,PPF agreed a deal to acquire control of one of the mobile incumbents, Telefonica O2 CR, subject to European Commission (EC) approval.
The CTU confirmed that Telefonica O2 CR and T-Mobile CR each purchased two 800MHz blocks of spectrum, with the former paying CZK2.386 billion (USD119.2 million) for two ‘A2’ blocks, and T-Mobile paying CZK2.231 billion for blocks in ‘A1’ and ‘A2’. Meanwhile, Vodafone CR bought one 800MHz block of ‘A3’ spectrum forCZK2.664 billion, in a tender that yielded a total of CZK8.529 billion for state coffers to support the 2014 budget. Each of the three companies also acquired part of the so-called ‘B2’ block of spectrum in the 1,800MHz band, and four blocks in the 2,600MHz FDD band, the watchdog added.

source: http://www.telegeography.com/products/commsupdate/articles/2013/11/20/ctu-awards-4g-spectrum-to-czech-incumbents-but-newcomers-miss-out/