FCC approves $9.7 billion package to speed C-band clearing

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Federal Communications Commission on Feb. 28 voted to auction a large portion of C-band in December under a plan that includes $9.7 billion in incentives to expedite relocating satellite operators out of the spectrum to make way for high-speed 5G networks. 

The agency’s five commissioners voted three to two in favor of the plan, released three weeks ago, despite worries that the plan will trigger litigation from disaffected companies or a rebuke from Congress where lawmakers had sought to legislatively prescribe the auction rules. 

Central to the debate was whether the $9.7 billion in payments to encourage satellite operators to fully vacate the spectrum two years faster — in 2023 instead of 2025 — was appropriate, or legal. 

“Without a strong incentive for satellite operators to cooperate, it will take years longer to clear this spectrum, dramatically reducing the value of this spectrum opportunity to wireless bidders,” FCC Chairman Ajit Pai said here. “It’s like repainting your house before you sell it; yes, there are costs to doing that, but the costs are more than offset by the higher sales price.” 

The FCC expects mobile network operators, like Verizon and T-Mobile, and other bidders to pay for satellite operator relocation costs and for the accelerated spectrum clearing. Those costs would be included in what bidders pay to access the spectrum when the FCC auctions it off in December, and are in addition to an estimated $3 billion to $5 billion or more of relocation costs — new satellites, ground stations, signal filters and signal compression technology — the FCC also expects them to cover. 

The FCC said Intelsat, SES, Eutelsat, Telesat and Embratel Star One, all of which demonstrated they have C-band customers in the U.S., as eligible for the accelerated clearing payments, which they would receive if they meet FCC clearing milestones that would free 280 megahertz of C-band by December 2023. 

Pai said he believes the FCC’s “conservative approach” will benefit the U.S. treasury, which would keep the rest of the auction’s projected $30 billion to $77 billion in total proceeds. 

Other commissioners questioned the legality of that approach. 

“After years of debate and thousands of pages of comments, it would be ironic if having compromised on so much, we end up in the same position that we so desperately wanted to avoid — stuck and mired in litigation without any auction ready to go, said FCC Commissioner Geoffrey Starks. “It is a real possibility as we sit here at this moment, and it didn’t  have to be this way.”

FCC Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel said there is no precedent for the accelerated clearing payments, and that the FCC doesn’t have the right to give those payments to satellite operators. 

“The FCC is reducing revenues that statutorially must go to the treasury and it is undermining the congressional power of the purse,” she said. 

Starks and Rosenworcel voted against the C-band plan. Pai and commissioners Michael O’Rielly and Brendan Carr voted in favor, allowing the plan to pass. 

 

source: spacenews.com