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Britain clears 700 MHz radio waves ahead of 5G auction in January
UK government announces 700Mhz radio spectrum is ‘clear for 5G’ after a £350 million project to retune 20 MILLION TVs ahead of the auction in January
- Almost 20 million TV sets had to be retuned to make space for 5G connections
- The project to retune took four years and cost about £350 million to complete
- Mobile companies will be able to bid for access to the spectrum in January 2021
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Next generation mobile internet could be coming to more of the UK after people ‘retuned their TVs’ to make room for 5G in the 700MHz radio wave spectrum.
It has taken four years and £350 million to get to a point where the government can auction off the spectrum, as almost 20 million television sets had to be retuned first.
The space will be sold to telecom firms hoping to offer expanded or new 5G mobile services in chunks of 80 MHz in January 2021, the government said.
The move will allow mobile companies to operate better in rural parts of the UK, as the 700MHz band ideal for ‘delivering wide geographic coverage’.
5G services in the UK currently operate in the 3.4GHz range, which is good for short-distance fast connections in urban areas, but less good for coverage.
When the new spectrum is auctioned off, along with parts of the 3.6-3.8GHz band, the total available spectrum for mobile services will increase by nearly a fifth.
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Digital Infrastructure Minister Matt Warman said it was part of a ‘quiet revolution’ in the UK airwaves that will improve mobile coverage for rural communities.
He said it will also allow people in those communities to ‘unlock new ways for 5G to boost business productivity and improve people’s lives.’
Spectrum is the airwaves over which televisions, mobile phones, tablets, radios and other devices communicate.
The 700MHz spectrum band had mainly been used for Freeview as well as professional radio microphones used in music studios, theatres and outdoor events.
Now that 20 million homes have successfully re-tuned their TV equipment to continue to receive their TV channels on lower frequencies the 700MHz band is exclusively available for mobile use.
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This will allow mobile operators and other innovative companies to use 5G to develop new high data usage technologies and services to boost sectors such as manufacturing, transport and healthcare.
According to Paul Donovan, CEO, Arqiva, said this was the biggest broadcast engineering project since the first digital switchover that saw a move from analogue TV.
He described the work involved as being like ‘performing open heart surgery’ on the nation’s television network.
The low frequency of the 700MHz spectrum band is ideal for carrying mobile signals into buildings and over long distances – including the countryside.
The move should also help improve capacity in existing 4G networks for rural communities – providing greater mobile coverage, reach and reliability.
As part of the auction in January 2021 the government will also sell off parts of the 3.6-3.8GHz spectrum band – perfect for shorter distance high speed links.
This higher band spectrum will allow some operators to offer speeds of more than 1Gbps over mobile connections – faster than most fibre broadband services.
- It wasn’t just the televisions that had to be retuned, according to Arqiva, the firm that runs television spectrum, 1,200 transmitters also had to be changed.
In many cases it involved engineers physically replacing antennas at the top of masts – some taller than The Shard in London.
TV sets in 17.8 million homes were re-tuned to continue to receive their TV channels on lower frequencies, with 99 per cent of viewers able to re-tune themselves.
Only 1 per cent of viewers needed free support from the Freeview Advice Line, and only 0.1 per cent required home visits from engineers to get them re-tuned.
The programme, which was funded by DCMS, was estimated for completion at the end of 2021 at a cost of £400 million – it ended this month for £350 million.
Ofcom, which has a duty to ensure the UK’s spectrum is used efficiently, will be releasing 80 MHz chunks of these important airwaves for mobile companies to use at an auction expected to take place in January 2021.
To help maintain strong competition in the UK mobile market, it will impose a 37 per cent cap on the overall spectrum that any one mobile company can hold. Daily Mail Online
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