Once
upon a time, the radio frequency (RF) spectrum (ranging from 3 Hz to 3000 GHz) was
used exclusively for radio (wireless sound transmission)—when it was used at all. Indeed, from the 1860s (when James Clerk Maxwell first postulated the
existence of radio waves) to the 1940s, there simply wasn’t any other practical
use for radio waves. Then commercial television began elbowing its way
into the RF spectrum, to transmit images together with sounds. After TV came cell
phones, which initially wanted RF spectrum for ordinary telephony uses,
followed by email, followed by pictures, video, text messaging, and graphics. Today,
a horde of untethered devices, ranging from L-Band satellites to RFID-tagged inventory
items, all clamor for a share of the RF spectrum in an ever-expanding global communication
network.
For
broadcasters, the result has been a steadily shrinking spectrum. Frequencies
assigned long ago, in a bygone era when the only wireless devices most people
possessed were their radios and TVs, have been reclaimed and reallocated for
other uses. And since, in an increasingly mobile world, the demand for wireless
communication continues to grow apace, in recent times, every MHz of RF
frequency spectrum a broadcaster continues to hold has rapidly escalated in
value. As a consequence, the choice made by a broadcaster to surrender or
retain RF frequencies has become a decision to realize or forego many millions
of dollars.
Analog-to-Digital Shift and the 2 GHz Relocation
For
broadcasters, the most momentous consequence of the growing demand for wireless
spectrum was the mandate requiring that full power stations complete a
transition from long-familiar analog to new digital technology by mid-2009,
with most low-power stations following by the end of 2011. In addition to any other
benefits (including an end to signal-transmission problems like ghosting and
snow), this shift to digital technology greatly increased the efficiency of RF
usage. Better efficiency not only enabled
a long-delayed shift from SD to HD resolutions
but also allowed broadcasters to surrender
frequency while gaining functionality.
Thus,
part of the overall digital transition
was the exchange of seven 17/18-MHz wide analog Broadcast Auxiliary Service
(BAS) channels for seven narrower 12-MHz wide digital BAS channels. Thus, where the old analog BAS band had run from 1990
to 2110 MHz, the new digital band started
instead at 2025.5 MHz. The resulting reallocation gave the lower 30% of the old
analog band (1990 to 2025 MHz) to Sprint/Nextel, for incorporation into their
adjacent Personal Communications Service (PCS) band (1850-1990 MHz). But this
diminution in BAS bandwidth involved no sacrifice by broadcasters. To the contrary, they profited from it—twice over.
First, in exchange for the extra bandwidth, Sprint/Nextel agreed to pay for all
the equipment broadcasters needed to convert their existing BAS usage from
analog to digital, e.g., new digital HD cameras and MPEG-4 encoders, transmitters, and receivers. Second, once equipped
with new digital gear, broadcasters were able to do far more with a 12 MHz BAS
channel than had ever been possible with an 18 MHz analog BAS channel (e.g.,
transmit two HD signals across it simultaneously).
Auction of UHF Spectrum
Since
1994, the FCC has sporadically auctioned off spectrum reclaimed either through shifts in transmission frequencies (like
the 2 GHz relocation) or consolidation of operations. Most recently, however,
they commenced a first-ever “incentive auction” (authorized by Congress in
2012) of 84 MHz, taken from the UHF TV broadcast spectrum. TV stations using
these frequencies could voluntarily decide to relinquish them, in exchange for a share of the auction proceeds. The initial
auction phase of this spectrum reallocation initiative took one year, starting March
2016 and ending March 2017, with a total of $19.8B raised (setting the market
price of 1 MHz of spectrum at just under $236M or, on a national MHz-pop scale,
at $0.73). Those UHF broadcasters that volunteered to surrender spectrum are
dividing the lion’s share of this revenue (just over $10B), with the government
claiming most of the rest of the proceeds (over $7B) for use in “debt reduction.”
Except for 14 MHz, all the freed UHF
spectrum goes to phone companies, who plan to incorporate the additional
bandwidth into new 5G networks.
While
$10B might seem generous—even extravagant—compensation for surrendering 84
million Hz out of a total spectrum of 3,000 billion Hz, hopes for this auction were more elevated. The expectation was that what, at first, seemed a frenzied demand for
spectrum would drive bidding far higher, past $60B. Far from the maximum amount
hoped for, then, $10B was the minimum figure at which broadcasters were willing to part with this much spectrum.
(To be
continued in part 2 of this blog)
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work with you now and into the future.
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