Of the Rs 5.36 lakh crore windfall, the premium 700 Mhz band spectrum could alone contribute over Rs 4 lakh crore if all frequencies are sold at pan-India base price of Rs 11,485 crore per Mhz - which is the highest price for any telecom radiowave.
However, the total potential revenue from the spectrum sale, expected to be held during May-June this year, is more than double of gross revenue of telecom services industry. Telecom service providers had gross revenue of Rs 2.54 lakh crore in 2014-15 financial year.
Trai for the first time has suggested a base price for 700 MHz band which is considered as the most efficient frequencies for high-end mobile services.
However, leading operators had requested the regulator to defer sale of 700 MHz spectrum, saying that ecosystem for providing services in this band was not developed and sale would lead to underutilisation of the spectrum for several years and block industry's crucial fund.
The regulator in its spectrum pricing recommendations for seven bands, including 700 Mhz and 800 Mhz, suggested a base price of Rs 2,873 crore per MHz for pan-India 1800 MHz frequency band - widely known as 2G spectrum. The new price is about 31 per cent higher than the base price fixed by the government in March 2015 auction.
For 3G spectrum in 2100 band, Trai suggested pan-India base price of Rs 3,746 crore, which could be the second largest contributor attracting bids of about Rs 63,000 crore.
On spectrum held by the Defence, Trai said that if Defence shifts to the designated Defence Band and its assignment in all the circle is restricted to maximum 20 MHz, around 201 MHz additional spectrum can be made available for commercial purpose in 1800 Mhz band.
(REOPEN DEL58)
After 3G spectrum, auction of all airwaves in 2500 Mhz band can garner bids of Rs 30,800 crore at Trai recommended pan-India base price of Rs 817 crore as sufficient airwaves are available for commercial use.
"The ability of the operators to pay for spectrum will be constrained as realised rate for voice and data are not growing, in fact declining for last few quarters and the balance sheets are already overstretched and there is not adequate appetite for equity in the market," Deloitte Haskins & Sells LLP Partner Hemant Joshi said.
As per the regulator, the 800 Mhz band can be auctioned only 10 circles. Trai has suggested about 60 per cent higher base price for this band compared to Rs 3,646 crore fixed in the last auction.
The Department of Telecom has indicated to Trai that only 37.5 MHz may be put to auction from the total available spectrum of 76.25 MHz in 800 Mhz band, which is also very high in demand for 4G services.
There is only 9.8 Mhz available for sale in 900 Mhz range. Spectrum in this band, ideal for voice and data services, had attracted bids worth Rs 75,165 crore in last auction.
The regulator has recommended that the entire available spectrum in 2100 MHz band, including spectrum taken back from STel should be auctioned.
STel 2G permits were cancelled in 2012 by the Supreme Court but its holding in 3G band, in Bihar, Orissa and Himachal Pradesh, remained unaffected by the order. The company later closed its operations in India and the regulator said that its 3G spectrum can now be put for auction.
Trai had mooted removing band-wise spectrum limit in the consultation paper but it has suggested status quo in its recommendations.
Any company interested in buying 700 Mhz spectrum will
need to buy minimum of 5 Mhz which at proposed price would amount to Rs 57,425 on pan-India basis. However, the price of the spectrum varies from circle to circle, with the highest being in Delhi at Rs 1,595 per Mhz and the lowest in North East at Rs 44 crore per MHz.
All villages having population of 10,000 or more but less than 15,000 to be covered within seven years of effective date of allocation of 700 Mhz band spectrum, Trai said.
Similarly, Trai has suggested minimum bidding of 1.25 Mhz quantum in 800 Mhz band, 0.2 Mhz in 900 Mhz band and 1800 Mhz each, 5 Mhz in 3G band, 10 Mhz each in 2300 Mhz and 2500 Mhz band.
The 900 Mhz and 1800 Mhz were earlier used for 2G services. Now some telecom operators have deployed 3G service in 900 Mhz and 4G in 1800 Mhz band.
The regulator has suggested network roll out condition for 900 and 1800 MHz bands should be treated as separate bands if a licensee deploys different technologies in these bands. This would be applicable for the existing licensees also who have acquired spectrum through auction of 2012 and onwards.
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