On September 8, the Telecom Commission had cleared Airtel's bid to install nearly 2,000 mobile towers in north eastern states for Rs 1,660 crore under the government-funded Comprehensive Telecom Development Plan for the North-Eastern Region (NER).
Under the plan, 8,621 out of 9,190 unconnected villages are to be covered by installation of 6,673 mobile towers with a total outlay of Rs 5,336.18 crore.
Jio, in a letter to Sundararajan on September 18, said the tender condition requiring service support to 2G handsets automatically mandates deployment of the outdated technology that is not only inefficient but expensive.
"... the decision to award the tender to M/s Bharti Airtel for some parts of the north-eastern region based on the current and faulty and restrictive tender conditions may also kindly be cancelled forthwith and a fresh tender may be issued with fair conditions for the benefit of people," Jio said.
DoT had floated this tender in 2016, but there were no bids. It then approved most of the changes in the tender document as demanded by industry body Cellulars Association of India and invited fresh bids this year, which saw participation from only Bharti Airtel.
Jio stated that the licences granted by DoT are technology neutral and there cannot be any discrimination during the tender process on the basis of technology deployed.
It added that the limitation to deploy only 2G technology is against the government vision for Digital India and digital payments to promote cashless transactions.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
