Govt unveils new unified telecom licence norms

Update: 2013-08-03 22:51 GMT
The Union Government on Friday unveiled the long awaited Unified Licence norms that provide for delinking of spectrum from operational permits and allows companies to offer services using any technology. The new licence regime will also allow companies to offer intra and inter-circle roaming but bars operators from acquiring subscribers in areas where they do not own licences.

All telecom companies will have to migrate to the new licencing regime upon expiry of their current permits. They will have to pay a licence fee of 8 per cent of annual revenues from telecom services.

Telecom companies would be allowed to offer mobile and fixed-line services using any technology. They can also provide Internet TV services. The new licences will be valid for 20 years, and would be renewable for another 10 years.

The licence agreement unveiled by Department of Telecom (DoT) bars telecom service providers from holding any beneficial stake in other operator in the service areas they operate.

‘In the event of holding/obtaining Access spectrum, no licensee or its promoter(s) directly or indirectly shall have any beneficial interest in another licensee company holding ‘Access Spectrum’ in the same service area,’ say the Unified Licences norms.

The move impacts companies like Reliance Communications and Vodafone who have permissible stake of less than 9.9 per cent in other telecom firms under the previous licencing regime.

RCom has a stake in Reliance Telecom Ltd (RTL), which has permits for providing GSM services in eight telecom circles of which six service areas — Bihar, Odisha, Madhya Pradesh, West Bengal, Himachal Pradesh and Kolkata — are common with Rcom. The RTL licences are due for renewal in December 2015.  Vodafone too holds around 4 per cent stake in Bharti Airtel which is within the permissible limit.

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