Report: China will not issue 3G licenses before 2008
By
Sumner Lemon
,
IDG News Service
, 02/22/2007
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The Chinese government will not issue licenses for 3G mobile services until the first quarter of 2008, according to a Chinese
report.
China's Ministry of Information Industry (MII) will not issue the licenses until a new round of tests involving the homegrown
TD-SCDMA (time division-synchronous code division multiple access) 3G technology ends next year, reported Caijing magazine in its latest issue.
Delaying the release of the 3G licenses will give TD-SCDMA and its backers additional time to close the gap with more mature
3G technologies, WCDMA (wideband CDMA) and CDMA2000 EV-DO (evolution data optimized).
In December, China's Minister of Information Industry, Wang Xudong, reiterated a promise that commercial 3G services would
be available when Beijing hosts the Olympic Games in 2008. Issuing licenses during the first quarter of 2008 would still allow
operators to meet this goal, even if they have little time to expand their 3G coverage areas throughout the country.
The eventual release of 3G licenses will coincide with a restructuring of China's major telecommunications operators, which
are currently split into fixed-line and mobile carriers, Caijing reported.
The four major Chinese telecommunication operators, which are all state-owned, are currently divided into fixed-line and mobile
carriers.
China Telecommunications (China Telecom) and China Network Telecommunications Group (China Netcom) are the country's primary
fixed-line carriers, offering voice and Internet services. To avoid overlap and direct competition between the two carriers,
the country was divided up between the two companies. China Telecom serves western and southern China, including Shanghai,
while China Netcom's market covers the north, including Beijing.
The two mobile carriers, China Mobile Communications (China Mobile) and China United Telecommunications (China Unicom), are
not restricted geographically, but they use different technologies. China Mobile operates a GSM (Global System for Mobile
Communications) network and has the most subscribers, while China Unicom has both a GSM network and a CDMA service that is
its primary network and offers faster data downloads.
Determining how these companies will be structured, and what mobile networks they will have, is not something that will be
determined by MII alone. The decision also involves the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission, which
oversees China's state-owned companies and is a central player in the 3G licensing process.
Further complicating the bureaucratic wrangling over 3G and telecommunication industry reform, there are other government
organizations, including the National Development and Reform Commission and Ministry of Science and Technology, involved in
the decision process.
The IDG News Service is a Network World affiliate.
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