City
Epaper

TRAI releases consultation paper on framework for service authorisations

By IANS | Updated: October 30, 2024 16:55 IST

New Delhi, Oct 30 The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) on Wednesday released a consultation paper on ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Oct 30 The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) on Wednesday released a consultation paper on the framework for service authorisations for provision of broadcasting services under the Telecommunications Act, 2023.

Several broadcasting platforms, which employ radio waves and spectrum for offering services, are issued license or permission by the government under Section 4 of the Indian Telegraph Act, 1885, which is replaced by the Telecommunications Act, 2023.

The Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (MIB) had sent a reference to TRAI informing that the Telecommunications Act, 2023 has been published in the official gazette of India.

The ministry also shared a background note providing the details of the policy guidelines of various licenses and permissions issued by MIB and the relevant sections of the Telecommunications Act, 2023 that may have a bearing on the terms and conditions of authorisations.

The aim is to harmonise the terms and conditions across various service providers, so that the terms and conditions for the authorisations of broadcasting services may be notified as rules under the Telecommunications Act, 2023.

Accordingly, TRAI has released a consultation paper for seeking comments from the stakeholders by November 20 and counter-comments by November 27.

Meanwhile, Industry body COAI had voiced concerns over TRAI’s recent views on the service authorisations framework, saying the contractual nature of present licences must be retained in the authorisation process for regulatory certainty and safeguarding long-term investors.

Since telecom licenses in India are contractual agreements between the Department of Telecommunications (DoT) and telecom operators, these licenses are legally binding contracts that outline rights, obligations and operational parameters to be followed by the telecom services.

“Therefore, the authorisation process must continue to retain the contractual nature of the present licenses, as this will ensure uniformity, regulatory certainty and protection to investors who commit long-term capital to the sector,” said COAI.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalTrump says US will stop bombing Houthis as they have 'capitulated'

Other SportsAbhay Singh Sekhon raises final hopes in Nicosia Shotgun World Cup

EntertainmentShraddha Kapoor drops a blast from the past with then & now photos

AurangabadLLB students shocked to get wrong question paper on 1st day of exam

InternationalIndia to drop tariffs to ‘nothing’, says Trump

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyIndia at the forefront of global energy transition: Piyush Goyal

TechnologyIndia’s 1st human spaceflight scheduled for first quarter of 2027: Minister

TechnologyPaytm Q4 revenue falls 15.7 pc, net loss widens to Rs 544.6 crore QoQ

TechnologyHPCL clocks 18 pc jump in Q4 net profit at Rs 3,355 crore, declares Rs 10.50 dividend

TechnologyGAIL hikes startup investment fund to Rs 500 crore in FY25: Hardeep Puri