| In a major rush to meet the 5 pm deadline set by the Department of Telecommunications (DoT) today, over a dozen companies applied for unified access service licence (UASL), mostly for pan-India services, in 22 circles. |
| Today's applicants include a wide range of companies "" from US telecom giant AT&T to real estate majors, CD maker Moser Baer, optic fibre to aluminum major Sterlite Industries promoted by Anil Aggarwal, Pramod Mittal-promoted steel giant Ispat Industries, and the Hindujas. |
| With this, DoT has now received over 400 applications for telecom licences, from just 74 five months ago. |
| AT&T has tied up with Mahindra & Mahindra group company Mahindra Telecommunications Pvt Ltd and applied for a pan-India licence. |
| AT&T will have a 74 per cent stake while the rest will be with the Mahindras. This marks the start of AT&T's second stint in the wireless space in India after it pulled out of Idea Cellular in 2002. |
| AT&T is the second foreign company to apply for a pan-India licence after Russian conglomerate Sistema, which bought over Shyam Telelink (which operates telecom services in Rajasthan), and put in an application also today. |
| Among the real estate applicants today are Delhi-based Omaxe group as well as BPTP and Aunita Properties. |
| Several lesser-known companies such as IT solutions firms Tulip, Meta Telecom, Prithvi Information Solutions Ltd, Next Generation have also applied amongst others. |
| Even ByCell, which had applied earlier for UASL licence in only five circles, extended its application for a pan-Indian licence. |
| DoT had fixed October 1 as the deadline for new applications for UASL licence. |
| Sources say scrutinising the applications could take two to three weeks, after which DoT will issue letters of intent to eligible players with a condition that they pay the licence fee (around Rs 1,500 crore for a pan-Indian one) within a week. Granting spectrum, however, will be dealt separately based on its availability. |
| The government is negotiating with the ministry of defence to vacate spectrum and hopes to get around about 25 MHz for current mobile service technology (known as second-generation of 2G services). |
| Apart from the new applicants there are over half-a-dozen companies that have already applied for UASL, which permits operators to offer both GSM and CDMA technology services. |
| These include Mahendra Nahata-promoted HFCL, Reliance Dhirubhai Ambani group-backed Swan and Cheetah Telecom, real estate developers DLF and Parasvnath, Idea Cellular (which has applied for nine circles) and Spice Telecom (which has applied for 20 circles). |
| The rush, experts say, is because the telecom market is expected to see big growth and is likely to hit over 500 million subscribers by 2010 and provide a major upside to investors. |
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