Thursday, March 27, 2025

Report Forecasts Impending Spectrum Crisis, Calls for More Licensed Mid-Band Capacity

On March 27, CTIA released a report by Accenture titled "Securing the Future of U.S. Wireless Networks: The Looming Spectrum Crisis." It predicts a near-term shortfall in available spectrum to meet growing demand, which could adversely impact wireless users during peak times as soon as next year. To avert that crisis, the report calls on Congress, the NTIA, and the FCC to make more mid-band spectrum between 3.3-8.5 GHz available for full-power licensed commercial use.  

The Accenture report estimates that U.S. consumers' mobile wireless data of over 100 Gigabits in 2023 was almost double data traffic volumes for 2021, and it cites a wireless industry estimate data traffic per smartphone will increase more than 250% by 2029. The FCC has not auctioned new commercial spectrum licenses since 2022. Without new spectrum inputs to support 5G services, including fixed wireless access (FWA) and emerging artificial intelligence (AI) applications, the report concludes that "[t]he U.S. will reach an available spectrum deficit of 401 MHz by 2027 and 1423 MHz by 2032." 

 

According to the Accenture report, the looming spectrum deficit means that "network capacity will meet only 77% of data demand during peak hours by 2027, and this will worsen to networks meeting only 27% of peak demand by 2035." The report finds a future deficit will cause as much as $1.4 trillion in lost U.S. gross domestic product (GDP) by 2035 – unless more spectrum is put into full-power licensed commercial use for 5G. 

 

There is a widely-recognized need that more spectrum needs to be repurposed from government use or occupancy to commercial use. However, intense disagreements exist over how much spectrum should be reallocated on a licensed basis versus an unlicensed basis. There are also diverging views over whether particular bands should be licensed on an exclusive basis to commercial licensees or on a shared basis with government users. Accenture's report provides an important contribution to the ongoing spectrum policy debate. The report's analysis and conclusions deserve thoughtful consideration.

 

Spectrum policy was also a topic of discussion and debate at the Free State Foundation's Seventeenth Annual Policy Conference – #FSFConf17 – held on March 25, in Washington DC. Be sure to check out videos featuring Senator Ted Cruz's keynote address, touching on his proposed legislation to replenish the spectrum pipeline, as well as the panel on "New Directions in Communications Policy."