New Delhi [India], November 10 : The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) on Monday released a consultation paper for the purpose of reviewing the existing TRAI Regulations on Interconnection matters, which comprise a total of nine interconnection regulations.
India's telecom industry is undergoing a technological evolution. These developments have rendered parts of existing interconnection modalities technically obsolete, necessitating a forward-looking regulatory reassessment, the telecom regulator stated in a press release.
The relevant section of the TRAI Act, 1997, empowers the Indian telecom regulator to fix the terms and conditions of interconnectivity between service providers, ensuring technical compatibility and effective interconnection between different service providers.
TRAI is undertaking a comprehensive review of all the nine existing interconnection regulations - The Telecommunication Interconnection Regulations, 2018; The Short Message Services (SMS) Termination Charges Regulations, 2013; Intelligent Network Services in Multi-Operator and Multi-Network Scenario Regulations, 2006; TRAI (Transit Charges for BSNL's Cell One Terminating Traffic) Regulations, 2005; The Telecommunication Interconnection Usage Charges Regulations, 2003; The Telecommunication Interconnection (Reference Interconnect Offer) Regulations, 2002; The Telecommunication Interconnection (Charges and Revenue Sharing) Regulations, 2001; The Telecommunication Interconnection (Port Charges) Regulations, 2001; and The Register of Interconnect Agreements Regulations, 1999.
According to the regulator TRAI, the review aims to ensure that the regulatory framework takes into account the evolution of technology and changes in the telecommunications sector.
Besides providing an effective interconnection framework for the contemporary state of the telecommunication sector, it should also be ready and resilient to adapt to the future evolution in the telecommunication sector.
Over more than two decades, the interconnection regulatory framework has evolved through a series of regulatory measures commencing with 'The Register of Interconnect Agreements Regulations, 1999,' and extending to the more recent The Telecommunication Interconnection Regulations, 2018'.
Further, these two regulations, along with various other interconnection regulations, have undergone subsequent amendments, with the latest amendment being 'The Telecommunication Interconnection (Second Amendment) Regulations, 2020,' notified on July 10, 2020.
The frameworks, as amended from time to time, have been instrumental in promoting fair competition, non-discrimination, reciprocity, cost-based pricing, and seamless service delivery in a multi-operator environment, thereby fostering a consumer-centric telecom ecosystem, TRAI said today.
The proposed review, inter alia, focuses on the examination of IP-based interconnection, which becomes more pertinent as accelerating 4G/5G rollout requires IP-based interconnection for better service quality, levels of interconnection which are currently at LSA (Licensed service area) levels for Mobile Network interconnections and at District/Tehsil levels for fixed-line Telephone Network interconnections.
The current review will also aim to examine interconnection issues related to emerging platforms such as satellite-based telecommunications networks, wherein key aspects include the nature and location of Points of Interconnect (PC)is), particularly those involving satellite earth station gateways and their interconnection with other satellite, mobile and fixed-line networks.
"The regulatory aspects pertaining to various charges presently applicable during interconnection between service providers, such as interconnection charges, interconnection usage charges (origination charges, transit charges, carriage charges, transit carriage charges, termination charges, and international termination charges) and Reference Interconnect Offer (RIO) framework are also being examined through the consultation paper," the TRAI statement read.
A pre-consultation paper was previously released on April 3, 2025, to gather stakeholders' views on the subject matter. Based on the input received from stakeholders during the pre-consultation and TRAI's further analysis, a consultation paper titled "Review of existing TRAI Regulations on Interconnection matters" has been released on the TRAI website.
Written comments on the issues raised in the consultation paper are invited from stakeholders by December 8, 2025 and counter-comments by December 22, 2025.
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