On Sunday, Grameenphone Ltd won 10 megahertz of spectrum with a bid of USD 21 million for each megahertz.
Three other private companies Banglalink, the local subsidiary of Egypt's Orascom Telecom; Robi, a joint venture between Malaysia's Axiata Group and Japan's NTT DoCoMo; and Airtel, majority-owned by India's Bharti Airtel also won bids for 5 megahertz of spectrum each at a price of USD 105 million.
State-owned Teletalk, which began 3G operations on an experimental basis last year, will also pay USD 210 million for 10 megahertz of spectrum.
Since 1997, when Grameenphone started its operations in Bangladesh, it has invested more than USD 2.5 billion.
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Vivek Sood, Grameenphone's chief executive officer, said in an interview that it was an "exciting moment" to offer third-generation mobile telecom service in Bangladesh, which has a population of 160 million.
The company is eyeing Bangladesh's largely untapped Internet market because 3G can offer relatively high-speed Internet data transfer.
"I am pleased with the outcome of the auction," he said. "Now it's the time to start our journey. Definitely we are on the competitive edge."
Last month, the International Finance Corp, the private sector arm of the World Bank, helped raise a USD 345 million loan for Grameenphone through a consortium to increase its network capacity and build more infrastructure in rural Bangladesh.
"We have a vision of Internet for all, we are moving forward with a massive plan," he said. "There are options for providing e-education, mobile health services through use of 3G."