TRAI asks stakeholders to give views on AGR

TRAI asks stakeholders to give views on AGR

NEW DELHI: The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) has asked the stakeholders to give their views on their definition of adjusted gross revenue (AGR).

 

In a pre-Consultation Paper on ‘Delinking of license for networks from delivery of services by way of virtual network operators,’ TRAI has also sought the views by 17 September on what will the model of agreement be between Network Service Operator (NSO) license and Service Delivery Operator license created under the draft National Telecom Policy 2011.

 

It has asked if this would be left to the market or regulated like mandating NSOs to provide services to SDO licensees and mandating charges etc.

 

In its Policy, Department of Telecom had said NSOs would be licensed to set up and maintain converged networks capable of delivering various types of services e.g. voice, data, video, broadcast, IPTV, VAS etc. in a non-exclusive and non-discriminatory manner.

 

SDOs would be licensed to deliver the services e.g. teleservices (voice, data, video), internet/broadband, broadcast services, IPTV, Value Added Service and content delivery services etc.

 

In its latest reference to TRAI, the DoT has envisaged the entry of Virtual Network Operators (VNOs) for delivery of services by delinking them from licensing of networks.

 

Virtual Network Operators (VNOs) are SDO licensees who do not own the underlying network(s) but rely on the network and support of the infrastructure providers, telecommunications operators (who are owner(s) of towers, radio access networks, spectrum etc.) for providing telecom services to end users/customers. As these operators do not have their own networks, they are termed as Virtual Network Operators. VNOs can provide any telecom service being provided by the network providers viz. tele-services (voice, data, video), internet/broadband, IPTV, Value Added Services, content delivery services etc. The most popular among VNOs are Mobile Virtual Network operators(MVNOs).

 

India is a diverse country, large in size and had very poor telecom networks when the government decided to open the sector to private participation.

 

Therefore, in order to ensure development and proliferation of telecom infrastructure across the length and breadth of the country, the government took a conscious decision that all TSPs would have their own network for providing services to their customers. To meet this end, each TSP was mandated to comply with certain roll-out obligations and even sharing of infrastructure was not permitted initially. To encourage tower sharing amongst operators, the government initiated a project ‘Mobile Operator Shared Tower (MOST)’ in March 2006, and later on, in April 2008 sharing of active infrastructure, except spectrum, was also permitted.

 

At present, most access providers are integrated operators who have their own infrastructure for both access and long distance services. Having already established their networks, the issue to deliberate upon is whether delinking the network from service delivery will have any effect on the working of these TSPs. The new licence regime has come into existence only about a year back.

 

In the proposed licencing framework, based on the VNO model, one issue could be whether the existing TSPs, will have to obtain a NSO licence or both NSO & SDO licences on migration to the new licensing regime.

 

A linked issue for deliberation will be about the necessity of changing the licensing regime at all, at such a short interval since UL was introduced.

 

At present, there are 7-13 licensees in various service areas. Therefore, another issue for deliberation could be about the need for introduction of more competition in the form of VNOs.

 

Apart from access services, for other services like V-SAT, PMRTS/CMRTS, GMPCS, it needs to be deliberated whether any business case/revenue potential exists for a standalone Virtual Operator for these services.

 

In India, the TSPs have infrastructure, including spectrum, which is just about sufficient to cater to their own requirements. Would they really be able to spare their infrastructure for new SDOs, TRAI wants to know.

 

It can also be deliberated whether the reference of DoT envisaged an entirely new licensing regime or could be considered to mean that a chapter may be added to the existing UL for facilitating licenses to the VNO.