Competitive Carriers Association and industry representatives met with FCC Public Safety Bureau staff on the group’s petition with CTIA (see 2211010056) for partial reconsideration of the FCC’s new mandatory disaster response initiative. Industry comments support the petition (see 2301110036). “CCA emphasized that providing uninterrupted service and maintaining resilient networks is a top priority for its members,” said a filing posted Friday in docket 15-80: “Many CCA carrier members operate in regions most vulnerable to hurricanes and other natural disasters and work diligently to harden their networks to ensure the availability of communications service when needed most and to facilitate emergency aid as quickly as possible.” While carriers are working to meet their obligations, “CCA members are concerned that all required agreements will not be finalized in time to satisfy existing FCC requirements,” the group said. Also at the meeting were representatives of Appalachian Wireless, Southern Linc, Dish Wireless and NextGen.
Groups representing 6 GHz incumbents spoke with an aide to FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel about cost recovery mechanisms for licensees having to mitigate against interference in the band, which was opened for unlicensed use three years ago (see 2004230059). “Costs that have been or will be incurred by incumbents due to new unlicensed use of the 6 GHz band include: baselining the RF environment, procurement of equipment and software that would enable licensees to identify interference and, if necessary, relocation of microwave facilities to other spectrum bands or alternative communications facilities,” said a filing Friday in docket 18-295. They cited as precedent a 1996 order by the FCC providing a plan for sharing the costs of relocating microwave facilities from the 2 GHz band. Among those at the meeting were the Utilities Technology Council, APCO, the Edison Electric Institute, the Enterprise Wireless Alliance and the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association.
Public Safety Spectrum Alliance representatives had meetings at the FCC, pushing for the agency to change course on the 4.9 GHz band and issue a single national license to FirstNet (see 2305160065). “We expressed our appreciation for the Commission’s approach, that would effectively and fully protect the interests of incumbent users, while also spurring innovation and driving down costs,” said a filing posted Friday in docket 07-100: “We expressed our support for the FirstNet Authority to be awarded a nationwide license for the 4.9 GHz Band and to select the new band manager.” The representatives met with Commissioner Geoffrey Starks, an aide to Commissioner Nathan Simington and staff at the Wireless and Public Safety bureaus.
Representatives of the Wi-Fi Alliance discussed with FCC staff a “package of specifications” now complete for evaluating 6 GHz standard-power devices. “Presentation of this package culminates a multiyear effort by Wi-Fi Alliance members to advance the 6 GHz Wi-Fi ecosystem,” said a filing posted Thursday in docket 18-295: “We expressed hope that these specifications will support and expedite the Commission’s effort to authorize 6 GHz standard power devices. We also expressed our continuing commitment to assist the Commission toward that goal.” Wi-Fi advocates hope for FCC action soon on a 2020 Further NPRM on 6 GHz operations (see 2306230046).
Verizon had initiated location-based routing for 56 public safety answering points nationwide as of July 7, with another 244 in progress, said a filing posted Thursday in docket 18-64. Verizon said it met with FCC Public Safety Bureau staff at the bureau’s request. “To determine whether device-based hybrid location information provided by the device during a call is adequate for routing, Verizon uses an accuracy threshold of 200 meters maximum horizontal uncertainty with confidence of 90 percent,” the filing said: “Verizon uniformly applies this threshold for all PSAPs, which was derived based on testing and analysis across many different jurisdictions and morphologies.”
Verizon got the highest marks among U.S. wireless carriers for achieving the fewest quality problems per 100 connections in call quality, messaging quality and data quality, J.D. Power reported Thursday. That’s based on data from the Mid-Atlantic, North Central, Northeast, Southeast, Southwest and West regions. “The performance of wireless network operators has set expectations high,” said Ian Greenblatt, J.D. Power managing director-technology, media and telecom. “Today’s wireless customers expect their phones to work perfectly every time,” he said.
Privately held StratCap said Thursday it acquired 13 cell towers and a 127,000 square-foot data center in Toronto during Q2. The towers are in Missouri, Wisconsin, Florida, Tennessee and New York, and they provide service to all major U.S. carriers, StratCap said. “StratCap remains bullish on digital infrastructure given demand drivers like the increasing number of connected devices, growing mobile data usage, the essential role of connectivity in our lives, and new technologies like 5G, autonomous cars, artificial intelligence, and more,” the company said.
The radio access network market faces a contraction worldwide, Dell’Oro Group warned Thursday. The RAN market “is done expanding for now,” the report said: “Following the 40 percent to 50 percent ascent between 2017 and 2021, RAN revenues flattened out in 2022 and these trends extended to 1Q 2023.” Global RAN is projected to decline at a 1% compound annual growth rate over the next five years, Dell’Oro said. “Even if it is early days in the broader 5G journey, the challenge now is the comparisons are becoming more challenging in the more mature 5G markets and the upside with the slower-to-adopt 5G regions is not enough to extend the growth streak,” said Stefan Pongratz, Dell’Oro vice president: “Meanwhile, growth from new revenue streams including Fixed Wireless Access and enterprise LTE/5G is not ramping fast enough to change the trajectory. With 5G-Advanced not expected to trigger a new capex cycle, the question now is no longer whether RAN will grow. The question now is, rather, how much will the RAN market decline before 6G comes along?”
Ericsson launched a smart, sustainable 5G site “showcasing its complete energy-smart network solution” in Plano, Texas. The site has the potential to be fully powered by solar energy, complemented by lithium-ion batteries, for up to a 24-hour period, said a Tuesday news release. “Phase two of the project will explore additional green energy sources as alternatives to diesel, such as hydrogen-based generators,” Ericsson said: “This phase will also explore interoperability with power grid vendors, optimizing local energy generation and consumption to sell back to the grid with net metering.”
Verizon told the FCC it doesn’t oppose T-Mobile’s proposed buy of Mint Mobile (see 2303150032), a low-cost prepaid wireless brand, and other assets from Ka’ena, but it took exception to a June presentation on the deal by T-Mobile (see 2306060033). T-Mobile suggested in a presentation to the FCC the transaction is “a much easier case” to approve than Verizon/Tracfone. “Contrary to T-Mobile’s suggestion, handset unlocking was never at issue in the Verizon/TracFone proceeding,” Verizon said in a filing posted Wednesday in docket 23-171: “No commenter in that proceeding raised handset unlocking as a concern. The matter came up solely because Verizon, as a licensee of 700 MHz Upper C Block frequencies, is subject to the Commission’s ‘open platform’ requirements applicable to that spectrum block, including a limited ability to lock handsets.”