Trai issues changes to interconnect regulations, tweaks norms
Nearly two months after it sought the industry's views on the matter, telecom regulator Trai on Thursday prescribed amendments to the interconnect regulations, proposing certain changes in terms and conditions for an operator to seek fresh call connect ports from other telcos.
The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (Trai) had sought views and comments from the industry by May 18 on these draft regulations.
According to the Telecommunication Interconnection (Amendment) Regulations, 2018, Trai has said that a service provider can ask another operator for additional ports in case the projected utilisation of the capacity at the interconnect point is likely to exceed 85 per cent over a 60-day period.
"The time-frame for provisioning of ports for initial interconnection and augmentation of ports at POls (points of interconnect) is increased to 42 working days," Trai said.
It said every operator will have to give a forecast of outgoing call traffic of busy hours for each interconnect point once every six months — April 1 and October 1 each year — to the interconnecting service provider.
"...the first such forecast shall be provided within sixty days of the commencement of the Telecommunication Interconnection (Amendment) Regulations, 2018 and thereafter on the 1st April and 1st October every year," the Trai statement said.
The issue of inter-connectivity had emerged as a major flashpoint between Reliance Jio and old telecom operators like Bharti Airtel, Vodafone and Idea Cellular, at the time when the newcomer launched its services in 2016.
Reliance Jio had accused other operators of not providing it sufficient points of interconnect leading to call failures, while operators blamed the free calls offered by the newcomer for the tsunami of network traffic.
In 2016, Trai had also recommended imposing Rs 105 billion penalty each on Airtel and Vodafone and Rs 9.5 billion on Idea Cellular for violating quality of service rules. Trai, at that time, had stated that it found the trio non-compliant with licence conditions and service quality norms, given the high rate of call failures and congestion at interconnect points for Jio.