3GNewsroom.com Home
3G shop
GreenTeaPots
you are here: Home >> 3G News

Other 3G News


  Recent News

Qualcomm and Teleepoch Enter Into a 3G CDMA Subscriber Unit License Agreement, October 6, 2007

MTN chooses Cambridge Broadband Networks for multi-service wireless network in Rwanda, October 6, 2007

Brazilian government to publish 3G bidding rules soon, October 6, 2007

KTF 3G service suffers from technical problems, October 6, 2007

Argentina’s Personal lunches 3G service in Rosario, October 6, 2007

Russia has it's first 3G network, October 6, 2007

AT&T could drop Alcatel-Lucent as 3G mobile network supplier, October 6, 2007

Enea Extends License Agreement with ZTE for 3G Handsets, October 2, 2007

LG to unveil premium handsets in Brazil, October 2, 2007

KTF 3G subscribers doubled in less than 3 months, October 2, 2007

3G policy in India will be non-uniform, October 2, 2007

- previous news

Search
Search news
Search this site

 

Low license fees to boost 3G adoption in Asia

date: April 18, 2001 - source by: CNet

Research firm Gartner expects the adoption of third generation (3G) services in Asia Pacific (including Japan) to be buoyed by low licensing fees.

According to a research published by Gartner Datapro's Voice Networking Technologies Group, 3G license cost in the region is about 10 times less expensive than in Europe.

"The freed-up capital can be used more effectively to roll out network infrastructure and develop new services on the 3G platform," claimed Gartner industry analyst Evelyn Goh in a statement yesterday.

The research singled out Japan as the most attractive market for 3G development. "Japanese 3G licenses were issued at no cost even though its cellular average revenue per user is among the highest in the world," Gartner said in the statement.

The report also noted that countries including Singapore, South Korea, Hong Kong, Australia and Taiwan are most likely to be early adopters of 3G as they had high mobile penetration rates.

In addition, the research claimed that their consumer markets are sophisticated and ready for 3G.

Last week, Singapore cancelled its 3G mobile license auction.

According to the Info-communications Development Authority of Singapore (IDA), the three bidders--MobileOne (Asia) Pte Ltd, Singapore Telecom Mobile Pte Ltd and StarHub Mobile Pte Ltd--chose different blocks of spectrum.

M1, SingTel and StarHub will each get a license at S$100 million.

The Singapore government had earlier reduced its initial reserve price of S$150 million for the auction of 3G mobile phone licenses to S$100 million.

The government said then that one of the reasons for the reduction was that fact that high 3G license costs in some of the early European auctions had led to debt downgrades throughout the telecoms industry.

"This will in turn lead to higher financing costs for, and may slow down, the rollout of 3G networks and services--an outcome which is not in the consumer's best interest," Singapore's Minister for Communications and Information Technology Yeo Cheow Tong said in Parliament last month.

 

top

Chinese YiXing Teapots
www.3GNewsroom.com, 2001 - 2007, disclaimer, contact us