The Chair of the Federal Communications Commission unveiled a key component of the agency's impending National Broadband Plan on Wednesday: a program to free up 500MHz of spectrum over the next decade for the mobile wireless industry. The agency will propose a "Mobile Future Auction" that will allow television broadcasters in "spectrum starved" markets to "voluntarily relinquish" licenses in exchange for a cut of the auction proceeds.
Speaking at the New America Foundation, FCC chief Julius Genachowski gave yet another "looming spectrum crisis" speech, warning that mobile high speed Internet—which the government has clearly made the centerpiece of broadband development—must have more licenses to meet exploding demand. He cited figures from Cisco that by 2014, North American wireless networks will carry 740 petabytes of data per month.
"Now even if you think a petabyte is something that sends you to the emergency room, you know that that’s a game-changing trajectory," Genachowki quipped. "Although the potential of mobile broadband is limitless, its oxygen supply is not," he added. "Spectrum—our airwaves—really is the oxygen of mobile broadband service. Without sufficient spectrum, we will starve mobile broadband of the nourishment it needs to thrive as a platform for innovation, job creation and economic growth. And the fact is America is facing a looming spectrum crunch."
Genachowski said that the FCC will work with the Department of Commerce's National Telecommunications & Information Agency on developing the 500 MHz plan. The NTIA's proposed budget for 2011 indicates that 500 MHz project "will focus on making spectrum available for exclusive use by commercial broadband providers or technologies, or for dynamic, shared access by commercial and government users."
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The FCC's boss has to maneuver somewhat gingerly around this issue. The broadcasting industry has given a distinctly cold reception to wireless and consumer device maker proposals for ways that television license holders could dramatically reconfigure their high altitude, high power transmission systems to free up as much as 180 MHz of spectrum. Now the FCC and NTIA are talking about 500 MHz.