The Telecom Disputes Settlement and Appellate Tribunal (TDSAT) today reserved its order on a plea by GSM operators against the recent hike in the spectrum usage charges by DoT.
A TDSAT Bench, headed chairman Justice S B Sinha, reserved its verdict after hearing the private telecom operators and the department of telecom.
In March, the tribunal had stayed the proposed hike by the DoT over a plea by GSM operators like Bharti Airtel, Vodafone Essar and Idea Cellular, who termed the hike as "arbitrary and without any reason" and informed the tribunal that they would increase call charges in accordance with the rise in their operational cost.
Senior advocate Abhishek Manu Sighvi, appearing for the GSM operators, submitted that DoT is adopting contradictory stance. He pointed out that on one hand, DoT says it is waiting for Trai recommendations as it is not in a position to take a decision on spectrum allocation, but on February 25, it had gone ahead and increased spectrum charges without waiting for Trai recommendations.
On February 25, 2010, DoT had increased spectrum usage charge in all circles under which operators were asked to pay a higher percentage of their adjusted gross revenue (AGR) to DoT as spectrum usage charges and on the basis of their spectrum allocation. The new charges vary between 3 per cent and 8 per cent depending on the quantum of airwaves held by an operator.
As per the new charge, an operator holding spectrum up to 4.4 MHz will be paying 3 per cent of the AGR compared to 2 per cent now. Most of the incumbent players other than those who got licences in January 2008 are having more that 4.4 MHz of radio waves.
Similarly, CDMA players with spectrum up to 5 MHz will now have to pay 3 per cent of their AGR as spectrum charges instead of the 2 per cent they pay now.