Ofcom dodges mobile capacity crunch

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New mobile spectrum to avert a 'capacity crunch' as usage doubles

 Ofcom today published plans to enable the release of new airwaves for future generations of mobile devices that will use 5G, to help meet consumers' growing demand for data on the move. By 2030, demand for mobile data could be 80 times higher than today, Ofcom stated. To help meet this demand and avert a possible capacity crunch, more mobile spectrum is needed over the long term, together with new technologies to make mobile broadband more efficient. Ofcom is preparing plans now to support the release of spectrum for future mobile services, possibly '5G', when the spectrum becomes available.

Alongside the announcement for future spectrum, Ofcom published new data on the UK's communications infrastructure, which shows that in June this year 20 million gigabytes of data was consumed over the country's mobile networks, the equivalent of downloading five billion music tracks, and more than twice as much as for the same month last year with nine million gigabytes.                  The plans aim to draw on the 700 MHz frequency band, which is currently used for digital terrestrial television, as part of future harmonised spectrum planning across Europe and the rest of the world. Releasing the new frequencies can be achieved without the need for another TV 'switchover'. It is important that different countries use the same frequencies of spectrum for mobile broadband to create economies of scale and widen the availability of handsets, which should in turn reduce prices for consumers, Ofcom claimed. Ed Richards, Ofcom chief executive, said: 'Within the coming months we will hold the UK's largest ever auction of mobile spectrum for 4G. However, that may not be enough to meet consumers' future data demands, which is why we are already making significant efforts to prepare to go beyond 4G. 'Our plans are designed to avoid a capacity crunch, ensuring that the UK's mobile infrastructure can continue to support the inescapable growth in consumer demand and economic growth more generally.'   Ofcom's plans also seek to ensure the long term future of digital terrestrial TV (DTT), which performs an important role in providing low cost, near universal access to the public service TV channels. This can be achieved by ensuring alternative frequencies are available for DTT when the next generation of mobile broadband is introduced towards the end of the decade. The changes will require an international spectrum plan to be agreed, and work on this is unlikely to be complete before 2018. Over the coming years, Ofcom will plan and prepare to ensure the changes are in the best interests of UK citizens and consumers.

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