Blog

Unresolved agenda items take WRC-15 right to the wire

World Radiocommunication Conference (WRC) negotiations are notorious for being complex, but this year’s inter-governmental event has exceeded expectations by remaining incomplete as of the penultimate morning.
| Toby Youell

According to conference protocol, agenda items should be complete before the penultimate day. This day is then reserved for the translation of documents and registration of national reservations and counter-reservations, while the final day is meant to be primarily ceremonial.

It was hoped that several agenda items this year would be resolved through the formation of ad hoc and informal groups to thrash out solutions. But these groups still had not completed their work by the afternoon of the third last day. In response to this, WRC-15 chair Festus Daudu instructed the groups to submit written reports by 7pm. The idea was that these reports could then be waved through in a plenary session.

But many of the delicate compromises and package deals put together in these groups quickly unravelled and could only be put together through a concerted effort. And while agreement on Agenda Item 1.1 (on mobile broadband) and the UHF band was relatively stable (“no change” globally but IMT footnotes in several Asian and American administrations), decisions on other frequencies in the L-band and C-band were much more unpredictable.

Spectrum for satellite CNPC for UAS (control and non-payload communications of unmanned aircraft systems, Agenda Item 1.5) was only provisionally agreed after lengthy discussion that included amendments to the text. And after more long negotiations, the conference concluded that the only way to deal with Agenda Item 1.6, on FSS (fixed satellite service) spectrum in the Ku bands, was to outsource it to the Radio Regulations Board.

Some of the longest negotiations were reserved for the agenda for future WRCs. These led to a future agenda item on HAPS (High Altitude Platform Stations) being temporarily thrown out, while as an expedient all controversial bands (including anything below 24.25 GHz) were removed from the 5G agenda item on spectrum above 6 GHz.

The plenary ended at 6am, but only due to the terms of the interpreters’ contracts. Three of the documents that plenary failed to consider last night were put to the editorial committee, which allows plenary sessions to revisit them later. The last words of the plenary consisted of a request from the South Korean delegation for its regional group, the Asia-Pacific Telecommunity, to discuss further details on Agenda Item 1.1.

Toby Youell, PolicyTracker

26/11/2015

Img Alt

Newsletter

Discover why hundreds of regulators and technology companies use our services

SUBSCRIBE
Comments
DirecTV/EchoStar deal could pave the way for Dish’s 5G network
Update: On 21 November, 2024, Reuters..." by Dugie Standeford
Nov 22, 2024
Mexican regulator assigns MSS spectrum but its future remains uncertain
Update: Globalstar confirmed that they..." by Laura Sear
Nov 19, 2024
Elon Musk backs call to auction UHF spectrum
Thanks Richard, now amended." by Jonathan Watson
Nov 05, 2024
Elon Musk backs call to auction UHF spectrum
There is a small error in your article:..." by Richard Womersley
Nov 04, 2024
US to force automakers to support AM radio
Hi Richard. I agree. I was suprised how..." by Richard Haas
Oct 23, 2024