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Cellular Operators Association of India (COAI) has asked the telecom regulator TRAI to defer the review of interconnect usage charges – paid by one telecom operator to another for connecting phone calls – till March 2017.
In its written response to TRAI's contentious consultation paper on interconnection usage charges or IUC, the association said that the regulator has initiated various other consultations which depending upon their final outcomes "may have a significant direct impact on cost structures, changes in technology and other market dynamics."
It further said that proposed Fixed Mobile Telephony Service of BSNL and Internet Telephony could not be trigger for initiation of the IUC consultation.
COAI, in August this year, had clashed with the regulator over IUC review terming the consultation on call connect charges as "unfair" on incumbent operators. At that time, it had also alleged that TRAI's discussion paper was an indicator of "bias creeping in".
TRAI had fixed 17 October as deadline for receiving industry comments on the controversial discussion paper.
It is learnt that COAI in its comments on the TRAI consultation paper has said that actual network-related costs incurred by telecom operators should be used to compute the interconnect charges, thereby batting for an increase in mobile termination charge.
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When contacted, COAI Director General, Rajan Mathews refused to comment on specific submission that the association has made to TRAI on the IUC issue.
However, sources said that the COAI, in its response, has pointed out that "all our member operators support and recommend that mobile termination charge should be determined on the cost based principle... Only Reliance Jio has a divergent view that 'Bill and Keep' approach should be adopted for determining the MTC."
The cost-based model includes network operating costs, overhead costs, spectrum costs and capital costs, and these, according to COAI, should form the basis of determining the mobile termination charge.
The mobile termination charge is currently pegged at 14 paise per minute, and a cost-based model would imply an increase in termination charges.
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