Tuesday, November 14, 2023

NTIA Releases National Spectrum Strategy, But Pipeline Remains Empty

On November 13, the NTIA released its National Spectrum Strategy (NSS). The document's release in advance of the December 31, 2023 deadline set by the White House is welcome as far as it goes. However, at the same time, the NSS doesn't appear to move the ball forward in any practical sense because it doesn't actually designate any spectrum for repurposing but instead simply identifies five bands for future studying – of up to two years – for "potential repurposing." There is a widely-acknowledged pressing need to dedicate more spectrum for commercial wireless services, but from a reading of the NSS it appears that the empty spectrum pipeline won't be replenished anytime soon.

The matter of most immediate importance covered in the National Spectrum Strategy is its first "pillar": "A Spectrum Pipeline to Ensure U.S. Leadership in Advanced and Emerging Technologies." The NSS selected five different spectrum bands totaling 2,786 megahertz (MHz) of spectrum for "in-depth near term study to determine suitability for potential repurposing to address the nation's ever-evolving needs." According to the NSS, "[t]hese spectrum bands are a mix of Federal and shared Federal/non-Federal bands—with an emphasis on mid-band frequencies—that will be studied for a variety of uses, including terrestrial wireless broadband, innovative space services, and unmanned aviation and other autonomous vehicle operations." Those five bands are: (1) Lower 3 GHz (3.1-3.45 GHz); (2) 5030-5091 MHz; (3) 7125-8400 MHz; (4) 18.1-18.6 GHz; and (5) 37.0-37.6 GHz. 

 

Additional "pillars" in the NSS address long-term planning for supporting spectrum use, improving spectrum access and efficiency through innovation and emerging technologies, and future spectrum-related workforce development. The NSS states that the NTIA's next step is to develop an Implementation Plan for carrying out the objectives identified in the report. That Implementation Plan reportedly will be completed within 120 days of the release of the NSS. A Presidential Memorandum issued on November 13 states that the Plan will include a schedule for detailed studies of the selected bands to be completed within 2 years of the submission of the NSS or within 2 years of receipt of funding for agency studies under the Spectrum Pipeline Act of 2015.

 

The 2015 Act ought to serve as a reminder that spectrum resource needs have long been recognized, but the federal progress on actually addressing those needs, across multiple Administrations, has been slow. Hopefully, the Implementation Plan will likewise be submitted ahead of schedule and the spectrum band studies also are completed rapidly so that significant progress finally becomes discernable and spectrum is actually repurposed to support 5G and future 6G services. Until then, the spectrum pipeline remains empty.

 

In April of this year, Free State Foundation President Randolph May and I submitted comments to the NTIA in its Development of a National Spectrum Strategy proceeding. See also my April 18 blog post, "FSF Calls for Fast Action on Mid-Band Spectrum." FSF scholars will have more to say in the near future on the NSS and spectrum policy.