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S-72.4210 Postgraduate Seminar in Radio Communications (8 ECTS Credits). General things about the course. Course theme in 2007 is ’Spectrum Management’ First session today 10.12.2007 Following sessions once a week in III period, exact times will be agreed upon today Personnel
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S-72.4210 Postgraduate Seminar in Radio Communications (8 ECTS Credits)
General things about the course • Course theme in 2007 is ’Spectrum Management’ • First session today 10.12.2007 • Following sessions once a week in III period, exact times will be agreed upon today • Personnel • Responsible teacher: • Prof. Riku Jäntti (riku.jantti@tkk.fi) • Course assistant: • Researcher Mika Husso (mika.husso@tkk.fi)
Course requirements • To complete the course: • Read chapters 1-7 from the ’Review of Spectrum Management’ book and answer related questions • Read, present and summarize 1-3 articles depending on their length and quality • Serve as an opponent to another participant's presentation. For this you need to read and understand the presenter’s papers. • Participate in the sessions
Topics on the course • Spectrum Management Regimes (administrative, market-based, commons) • Spectrum Auctions • Dynamic Spectrum Allocation • Current Regulatory Structures • Ambient Networking • Spectrum Refarming • Future Of Spectrum Management
Spectrum management – brief introduction • Spectrum management objectives: • Economic efficiency (spectrum to those who benefit the most from it) • Technical efficiency (high spectral efficiency and utilization) • Public policy (consistent with goverment goals for facilitating competition in telecoms market, retaining frequencies for emergency needs etc.) • Historically done by: • Blocks of spectrum allocated to services by international agreements • National Regulatory Authorities (NRAs) assign licenses for use of specific frequencies to operators • When old systems ”die” frequencies can be reallocated Oper.1 Oper. 2 Oper. 3 Oper. 4
Spectrum management – brief introduction • Known problems • Regulatory burden (increasing regulatory resources seldom solves problems related to regulation itself) • Inefficiency (inflexibility, users need to meet regulatory requirements even when not economically sensible) • Ineffictiveness (due to rapid change of needs but stable resources allocation, spectrum is not optimally distributed)
Spectrum management – brief introduction • How to attack the problems? • Utilization of market mechanism (spectrum auctions, trading of licenses) • The commons approach (licence exempt operation) • Creating financial incentives for efficient spectrum use • Generally, the principle would be to expose all spectrum users to the opportunity cost of the spectrum which they occupy * As spectrum is a scarce resource, its use involves an opportunity cost
Questions to be answered… • To what extent should spectrum be regulated and by whom? • When should and should we not let markets handle spectrum management? • How do we guarantee sufficient competition im the market to enable efficient distribution of spectrum? • How should we price the spectrum? • What steps should we take next to facilitate more efficient use of spectrum? • …
List of topics The topics based on selected papers include: • Overview of spectrum management regimes (1) • Future of spectrum management (2) • Spectrum auctions (2) • Spectrum auctions vs. commons (1) • Licensing vs. commons (2) • Dynamic spectrum allocation (1) • Role of regulatory authorities (1) • Regulatory structures and new perspectives (1) • Market-based spectrum management (2) • Business opportunities of ambient networking (1) • Refarming and sec. trading of spectrum (1)