"Three or four solid networks around the 700Mhz would have taken care of a lot of rural broadband networks. This is a missed opportunity. I hope the government will look into this and correct that particular part," Mittal said here at the India Economic Summit organised by the WEF and CII.
India's biggest-ever spectrum auction ended yesterday without yielding the expected results with telecom players placing bids worth just Rs 65,789 crore in five days, leaving nearly 60 per cent of airwaves, including premium 4G bands, unsold. The auctions could have fetched Rs 5.6 lakh crore to the exchequer if all spectrum was sold at the reserve price.
"I have always maintained that. The pricing, you yourself have seen. Nearly Rs 60,000 crore for a small little tiny 5 MHz, it was bound not to get any response. Nobody should be surprised," Mittal said when asked if the telecom companies did not bid for 700 Mhz band due to the high pricing.
Although only 40 per cent of the spectrum that was put up for auction was taken, Mittal refused to call the process a failure.
"It is not a failure. It is USD 10 billion, Rs 66,000 crore (auction). Why do you call it a failure? I think the government did very well by putting on the table a lot of spectrum and it must be congratulated for running a fantastic, open process," he said.
He said that earlier the Indian spectrum position was
woefully inadequate when compared with any other parts of the world.
"We have come from that problem in a dramatically quick way and fast manner... I think the government is trying to harmonise lot of spectrum. A lot of spectrum have been put on the table, parts in section, and segments of that spectrum are extremely expensive," he added.
Market leader Bharti Airtel acquired 173.8 Mhz spectrum in bands of 1800MHz, 2100 MHz and 2300 Mhz through auction for Rs 14,244 crore in circles including Kerala, Assam, Maharashtra, Delhi, Mumbai and North East.
