The
World
Radiocommunication Conference (WRC-07) ended on 16th
November 2007 after four weeks of difficult discussions. Its
attendance was unprecedented, exceeding 2600 delegates from 164
countries, and more than 3000 proposals for modifications to the
ITU Radio Regulations were considered. Its decisions, taken in
full consensus, illustrate the continued ability of the ITU to
adjust international regulations to technology and market
changes in a timely manner. They will influence the development
of radiocommunications for several decades.
International
Mobile Services (IMT)
The main and most
difficult issue related to new allocations and identifications
of spectrum for IMT, to ensure that mobile services, which have
become part of everyday life in all countries, can continue to
grow in the future to adjust to higher transmission rates. In
this context, going to frequencies higher than 2G (900 MHz) or
3G (2 GHz) opens wider spectrum resources but also translates
into higher costs, since many more base stations are required in
these bands. Two types of candidate bands were therefore sought
for:
-
At higher frequencies to face growth in densely
populated areas
-
At lower
frequencies to provide, at a reasonable cost, high speed
mobile services everywhere, in particular in less densely
populated areas, thus reducing the digital divide.
Access to spectrum
by all countries for both of these requirements was one of the
main objectives of this conference. However, mobile services
such as IMT use spectrum extensively, in a way which is hardly
compatible with any other use in the same geographic area. In
each of the four frequency bands which emerged as potential
candidates, current uses in many countries cover key
applications, with no or little potential to migrate to other
bands. Selecting only one or even two or three of these bands
therefore represented, for a very large number of countries, a
significant threat to interests as fundamental as terrestrial
television broadcasting, defense applications or lifeline
fixed-satellite services.
Given this
situation, the conference decided to identify for IMT and to
allocate to the mobile service, where it was not already the
case, all or part of the four frequency bands. From this set,
each administration will be able to make a selection to
accommodate its requirements for mobile services with minimum
effect on other key services. The balance with these services
was achieved by adopting technical and regulatory means to
protect them and by limiting the amount of spectrum identified
for IMT:
�
790-862 MHz in Regions 1 and 3 and 698-806 MHz in
Region 2 and some countries in Region 3. In addition, further
compatibility studies will be carried out and considered by
WRC-11 to ensure full protection of affected services in Region
1 and 3.
�
3.4-3.6 GHz in more than 80 countries. Protection
of the fixed-satellite service is ensured through a coordination
procedure and a limitation of the power flux density at the
border.
�
450-470 MHz and 2.3-2.4 GHz, worldwide.
This decision will
enable manufacturers to produce IMT equipment in large
quantities at attractive prices. Roaming opportunities and
economies of scale will be available worldwide. IMT service may
start in these bands from 2009, and at the latest from 2015,
subject to agreement between the administrations concerned.
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