£1.36bn raised in 4G/5G spectrum auction

  

The airwaves sale is available in two frequency bands, 2.3GHz, and 3.4GHz. 2.3GHz is usable by current mobile phones and will help improve 4G capacity for today’s mobile users, while 3.4GHz is one of the spectrum bands earmarked for 5G, the next generation of mobile technology.

Ofcom has duties to promote competition and manage the use of spectrum efficiently, and the auction has been designed to achieve this.

Five companies are taking part in the auction. The principal stage, which has just ended, involved 34 ‘lots’ of spectrum being made available across the two bands.

Ofcom has now confirmed the amount of spectrum won in the principal stage by each company, which totalled to an overall spend of £1.36billion.

  • Airspan Spectrum Holdings has not won spectrum in either band.
  • EE has won 40 MHz of 3.4 GHz spectrum at a cost of £302,592,000.
  • Hutchison 3G UK has won 20 MHz of 3.4 GHz spectrum at a cost of £151,296,000.
  • Telefónica UK has won all 40 MHz of 2.3 GHz spectrum available, at a cost of £205,896,000; and 40 MHz of 3.4 GHz spectrum at a cost of £317,720,000.
  • Vodafone has won 50 MHz of 3.4 GHz spectrum at a cost of £378,240,000.

Ofcom says it will now move to the ‘assignment’ stage, which is the last bidding stage of the auction. This is short process, Ofcom adds, which allows companies who have won spectrum in the principal stage to bid to determine where in the frequency bands their new spectrum will be located.

After the end of the assignment stage, the winning bidders wll be issued licences to use the relevant spectrum within a few days.

Philip Marnick, Spectrum Group Director at Ofcom, said:: “This is good news for everyone who uses their mobile phone to access the internet. As a nation, we’re using ever more mobile data on smartphones and mobile devices. Releasing these airwaves will make it quicker and easier to get online on the move. It will also allow companies to prepare for 5G mobile, paving the way for a range of smart, connected devices.”