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    HomeNewsARCEP targets remote areas in 700MHz auction proposals

    ARCEP targets remote areas in 700MHz auction proposals

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    Improving mobile data access on the national railway network has been highlighted as a priority in France’s forthcoming 700MHz auction, the country’s regulator has said.

    Six 2x5MHz blocks of 700MHz will be sold off in the fourth quarter of this year at a reserve price of €416 million each.

    ARCEP, the French regulator, will not allow any bidder to buy more than three blocks in the band. Additionally, they must not exceed 2x30MHz of spectrum in the 700MHz, 800MHz and 900MHz bands, following the auction’s conclusion.

    Operators will have until the end of the third quarter to register interest in the auction. They will win a 20-year licence, to be paid in four equal instalments annually from the award of the spectrum. In addition to the value of its winning bid, they must pay one percent of turnover attributable to the acquired spectrum.

    Under the terms of the auction, operators must fulfil a range of coverage criteria. By late 2030, for example, France’s main roads must have 100 percent coverage. It must offer 60 percent coverage of regional rail lines by January 2022, 80 percent by January 2027 and 90 percent by late 2030.

    ARCEP said: “The procedure includes coverage obligations that are as strong as those attached to the 800 MHz band. There are particularly strong demands for deployment of the 700 MHz band in rural areas, in addition to 800 MHz band frequencies, to be able to improve the quality of 4G services in these areas over time and to prepare for the potential development of 5G services on these bands.”

    The spectrum has been freed up thanks to the decision to move French digital terrestrial channels off the band between April 2016 and June 2019.