By Tommy Wilkes
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India's biggest telecommunications carrier, Bharti Airtel Ltd
The investment plan comes as Reliance Industries Ltd
Mobile phone carriers in India have spent billions of dollars on buying telecom airwaves to meet surging demand for quality and fast data connection as more Indians access the Internet through their smartphones.
Airtel said on Monday the bulk of its $9 billion investment would be used on infrastructure to improve voice and data services in a country known for its poor mobile connectivity.
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Gopal Vittal, Bharti Airtel's chief executive for India and South Asia, said the planned investment, to be raised largely through cash accruals, includes the capital expenditure target of about $2.2 billion for the current fiscal year to March 2016.
"There still are problems with the network...We are still not where we need to be," Vittal told reporters, referring to India's increasingly congested airwaves that leave calls disconnected in the middle of conversations.
"The primary purpose of this is a commitment to building a world class network in India," he said, adding the company has already bought most of the radio airwaves needed.
There are more than 970 million mobile phone subscriptions in India, government data show. The number of smartphone users topped 140 million last year, and is expected to reach 651 million by 2019, according to a study by Cisco.
Airtel, which also competes with Vodafone Group PLC's
The investment plan also comes in amid the government's "digital India" push to connect 250,000 villages by 2019.
($1 = 66.7800 rupees)
(Reporting by Tommy Wilkes, additional reporting by Devidutta Tripathy in MUMBAI; Editing by Sunil Nair and Gopakummar Warrier)


