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Ottawa to spring 3500 MHz spectrum for urban, rural areas

Xplornet protests proposal for cellular carriers to get frequencies in urban areas

A year ago Industry Canada promised the wireless industry it would try to allocate 750 MHz worth of spectrum for commercial mobile services by 2017.

On Tuesday it took another step to adding more frequencies for bandwidth-hungry carriers by proposing to split spectrumย in the 3500 band, which had been designated years ago strictly for fixed wireless service, into two types: Rural for fixed wireless, and urban (areas with a population of 30,000 plus) for mobile services.

Some of the spectrum is already being used by service providers, while some of it will be repurposed and freed for mobile use. (Xplornet Communications, which specializes in broadband service to rural areas and uses 3500 MHz spectrum. โ€œXplornet is deeply concerned about this consultation and the proposal that will have a detrimental impact on high speed Internet access for rural Canadians,โ€ president Allison Lenehan said in a statement.ย  โ€œAt this point, we are reaching out to Industry Canada officials to make them aware of the implications of this proposed change.โ€

Ifย turned into policy it โ€œwill take spectrum away from providers, like Xplornet, who deliver service today to Canadians outside cities, and give it to the telcos for cellular phone use,โ€ the statement said. โ€œIf implemented, hundreds of thousands of Canadians will have their internet disconnected, and could be forced back onto dial-up.ย  Under the proposal, Industry Canada would declare large swathes of ruralย Canadaย to be โ€œurbanโ€ area, and re-designate the spectrum being used today for fixed wireless high-speed internet in those areas, as cell phone spectrum.ย  People in those areas already have cell phone coverage, but under the proposal they would lose their home internet connection as a consequence.โ€ย 

Meanwhile, he said, the freed spectrum will go to incumbent cellular carriers who are now โ€œsitting on stock piles of un-deployed spectrum in these areas.โ€

The 3500 urbanย spectrum will eventually join frequencies in the 700 MHz band auctioned off earlier this year and in the 2500 MHz band to be auctioned off next year to give cellular carriers more bandwidth.

However, urban carriers wonโ€™t be getting hold of the 3500 MHz frequencies very soon, because there are no handsets right now that can handle the newest technology, LTE.

On the other hand, Internet service providers that offer ruralย  areas fixed wireless โ€” which gives businesses and residences wireless ย broadband ย โ€“ will be able to immediately access new 3500 Mhz spectrum on a first-come, first-served basis.

Splitting the 3500 MHz band for mobile and fixed wireless is a good idea, commented Iain Grant of the SeaBoard Group, a Montreal telecom consultancy. โ€œItย shows they are flexible andย  looking at new ways of doing things,โ€ he said in an interview.

Some ISPs already have 3500 MHz spectrum on 10 year licences that are about to expire. If their existing licence conditions have been met they will be given one-year extensions. Otherwise the licence owners will surrender their spectrum for the government to dispose of.

This is an extension of the โ€œuse it or lose itโ€ spectrum policy Industry Minister James Moore announced last November for spectrum holders in the 2500 MHz block.

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