This website will offer limited functionality in this browser. We only support the recent versions of major browsers like Chrome, Firefox, Safari, and Edge.

Keeping interference in check: Seven decades of ITU’s radio frequency circular

  • Keeping interference in check: Seven decades of ITU’s radio frequency...

Keeping interference in check: Seven decades of ITU’s radio frequency circular featured image

By ITU News

For over 70 years, the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) has been publishing its key radiocommunication circular, an important notice containing information on global radio frequency assignments.

On July 11, the ITU Radiocommunication Bureau (BR) released the landmark 3,000th edition of the publication, known in the field as the BR International Frequency Information Circular (BR IFIC).

The BR IFIC – published every two weeks pursuant to Article 20 of the Radio Regulations – contains the particulars of frequency assignments recorded in the Master International Frequency Register (MIFR) and Worldwide/Regional Plans for space and terrestrial services, along with the notices for proposed new assignments.

The Radio Regulations , specifically RR No. 1.18, define “ assignment” (of a radio frequency or radio frequency channel) as the  “ Authorization given by an administration for a radio station to use a radio frequency or radio frequency channel under specified conditions.” 

A frequency assignment recorded in the MIFR enjoys international recognition and protection from harmful interference.

The history of the BR IFIC is entwined with ITU’s core mandate to facilitate interference-free communications worldwide. ITU maintains the key Radio Regulations treaty and supports coordination among countries and radio services worldwide, particularly to deconflict potentially incompatible spectrum uses.

Why the BR IFIC matters

As radio-based technologies become more sophisticated and digital ecosystems expand, the airwaves are becoming increasingly crowded. This elevates risks of harmful interference in the world’s limited radio frequency spectrum.

Harmful radio interference can disrupt broadcasting signals, mobile and fixed communications systems, and a growing array of vehicle navigation and time-geolocation networks. It also affects scientific services that are vital to monitor climate change and the planet’s health.

Following the Titanic disaster in 1912, governments agreed on allocating a dedicated frequency for distress calls and adopted regulations to prioritize distress calls over other telegraph calls.

The International Radiotelegraph Conference held in Washington in 1927 established a table for frequency allocations to different services. Until then, countries could use almost any available frequency as they saw fit, simply notifying ITU – formally the International Telegraph Union until 1934 – of their use of the frequency for publication in the International Frequency List.

But this free-for-all scenario led to chaos amid the rapid expansion of radio services. By the late 1940s, as more countries launched new services in the congested spectrum, the risks of harmful interference had become intolerable.

Radio-frequency experts at the time expressed fears that ground-to-air communication was compromised, and civil aircraft could no longer fly safely. Broadcasting services became more frequently garbled.

Global frequency harmonization

ITU’s Atlantic City Radio Conference in May 1947 restored order to the sector by creating the International Frequency Registration Board ( IFRB ). Later the same year, ITU became a specialized agency in the newly created United Nations system.

The IFRB had a mandate to:

  • Maintain a register of all radio frequencies used for all purposes throughout the world.
  • Ensure no frequency was used by any country if this caused interference for radio stations already in operation in line with the Radio Regulations.

The new Board thus became the custodian of the MIFR, containing all frequency assignments to radio stations as notified by administrations worldwide. ITU in turn started periodically publishing the details of all frequency assignments recorded there, for the guidance and benefit of countries worldwide.

Thus, the key ITU radiocommunication circular – the BR IFIC’s forerunner – started in October 1952. ITU Member States were invited to send telegrams to the IFRB with any objections or comments on frequency assignments within two weeks of each edition.

Stepping into the digital future

The original circular, printed on paper, became more voluminous each time. By the late 1980s, many sections were converted to microfiche – a thin, flat sheet of transparent photographic film containing a grid of small-scale page reproductions.

Another update came in 1991, with the Weekly Information Circular on a floppy diskette complementing the microfiche and paper versions.

Reforms at ITU in 1992 brought the merger of the International Radio Consultative Committee (CCIR) – the predecessor of today’s ITU-R Study Groups – and the IFRB Secretariat into the ITU Radiocommunication Sector (ITU-R). This new structure would be served by ITU’s Radiocommunication Bureau, with the part-time Radio Regulations Board ( RRB ) replacing the full-time IFRB.

The circular’s 2,410 th edition, published in January 2000, was the first to officially carry the name “BR IFIC” (usually pronounced “Brific”). At the same time, the Radiocommunication Bureau started distributing the BR IFIC in standard digital disc formats (CD-ROM) every two weeks, replacing the former paper, microfiche, and diskette versions.

Given the large volume of data involved, the BR IFIC circular comes in two parts: Terrestrial Services and Space Services . The BR IFIC made the transition from CD-ROM to DVD-ROM starting with the version for Terrestrial Services subscribers in 2005.

itu frequency assignment

The future of the BR IFIC

After more than 70 years, the ITU information circular on radio frequencies remains a pillar of global spectrum management. Every two weeks, the BR IFIC provides essential information on all frequency assignments worldwide.

This lets countries to assess whether any new assignment could affect their own planned or existing radio systems – and to address this through international coordination where necessary.

ITU’s Radiocommunication Bureau aims to keep making the BR IFIC more accessible, notably by developing online tools to facilitate consultations of the BR IFIC data, as well as subsequent application of the procedures of the Radio Regulations and related regional agreements.

Stay tuned for BR IFIC 4,000 in 2063!

Header image credit: Adobe Stock

Related content

Wrc-23: regions prepare spectrum proposals, wrs-22: regulation of satellites in earth’s orbit, wrs-22: how itu-r study groups work.

This information is available only to people with TIES access.

Privacy Overview

National Academies Press: OpenBook

A Strategy for Active Remote Sensing Amid Increased Demand for Radio Spectrum (2015)

Chapter: 7 spectrum access: allocation policies and the assignment process.

Spectrum Access: Allocation Policies and the Assignment Process

INTRODUCTION

The radio frequency (RF) spectrum has many uses beyond the popular mobile communications and TV broadcasting. The onset of smart phones, tablets, and machine-to-machine communications has created great demand for wireless broadband and digital data to support numerous mobile applications. This increased demand for mobile broadband creates a derived demand for additional RF spectrum for mobile broadband. Some of the many examples include smart phone applications, as well as wireless broadband deployed in support of applications in agriculture, automotive, education, energy efficiency, health, commerce, and smart cities. The largest increase in mobile broadband use has been in video. By the end of 2013 it was estimated that greater than 50 percent of wireless broadband use was for video. 1 This is expected to continue to be the greatest driver of additional wireless broadband demand.

___________

1 Sandvine, Global Internet Phenomena Report , 2013, https://www.sandvine.com/downloads/general/global-internet-phenomena/2013/2h-2013-global-internet-phenomena-report.pdf .

RADIO SPECTRUM POLICIES

U.S. Radio Spectrum Policies

U.S. spectrum policy is driven by its broader broadband policy, which can be summarized as “more is better.” In 2010, the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) issued a National Broadband Plan (NBP). 2 This plan set a goal of allocating an additional 500 MHz of RF spectrum to mobile broadband uses over the next 10 years. Two significant reallocations meet a portion of this goal and will be available in the next few years:

  • Advanced Wireless Services, Band 3 (AWS-3) . This will extend the existing wireless broadband AWS band and make 65 MHz of spectrum available through a combination of reallocating and sharing with federal users.
  • TV Incentive Auction . This will simultaneously buy out TV broadcasters and sell the reclaimed RF spectrum to mobile broadband providers. The amount of spectrum reallocated will be determined in the auction by a combination of what mobile wireless providers are willing to pay and how much TV broadcasters demand for their licenses. If properly designed and executed, this auction should reallocate up to 120 MHz from TV to mobile broadband uses.

These two allocations, however, comprise less than 200 MHz of new spectrum for mobile broadband. Meeting the remainder of the NBP’s goal of 500 MHz of spectrum will be difficult because it will involve significant transfers of spectrum currently dedicated to various uses by federal government agencies. 3 Much of this spectrum is likely to be made available to the private sector only on a shared basis.

International Radio Spectrum Policies

The United States is not alone in its desire to have more RF spectrum available for commercial uses. Table 7.1 is a snapshot across the world indicating the amount of spectrum in the pipeline for mobile broadband, and Figure 7.1 depicts the large and growing global use of mobile phones. Finding this additional spectrum is a challenge for policy makers and may be unattainable. The tools available to policy makers to meet these goals consist of reallocation, spectrum sharing, and developing higher spectral efficiencies.

2 FCC, “National Broadband Plan,” https://www.fcc.gov/national-broadband-plan , accessed June 4, 2015.

3 It is also possible that spectrum allocated to satellite uses that could be used terrestrially could go toward this 500 MHz.

TABLE 7.1 Summary of Total Available Licensed Spectrum Available for Mobile Broadband (in megahertz)

NOTE: U.S. Pipeline numbers do not include the significant amount of spectrum that will be made available for mobile broadband from incentive auctions and federal repurposing.

SOURCE: Federal Communications Commission, “The Mobile Broadband Spectrum Challenge: International Comparisons,” FCC White Paper, Wireless Telecommunications Bureau, Office of Engineering and Technology, Washington, D.C., February 26, 2013.

Outside the United States, it is common to allocate spectrum to a specific cellular technology (2G, 3G, or 4G). Reallocation, sometimes referred to as refarming, could involve moving from 3G to 4G services and enabling higher efficiencies, exploiting the digital dividend from more efficient TV broadcasting technology, or finding bands of low usage and thus reallocating them to a higher use. Exploiting the digital dividend by migrating from analog to digital TV, and freeing up spectrum for other uses in the process, is a primary means of providing additional spectrum. 4 The Mobile Satellite Services (MSS) spectrum is also under consideration for terrestrial uses.

The European Union (EU) has been addressing the potential for spectrum sharing through the TV Whitespace, as well as Licensed Shared Access (LSA) and Authorized Shared Access (ASA) for both the 2.3 GHz and the 3.5 GHz band.

With additional capital investments, higher spectral efficiencies can be obtained by waveform and network optimization as well as higher spatial reuse (cell splitting). Moving from waveforms for voice services to data services can provide sig-

4 Over the past decade, interest was expressed by both the private sector and government institutions in several countries, including the United States, to develop high-speed communication using the power grid instead of towers and repeaters. To date, the concept has not materialized, but should such an approach become feasible, its potential RFI effects on active sensing could be detrimental.

images

FIGURE 7.1 Top 13 mobile operators. SOURCE: Data from J. Groves and W. Croft, “Operator Group Ranking, Q1 2013: Chinese Carriers Continue Strong Growth; Egypt Deal Lifts Orange,” Research, GSMA Intelligence, July 4, 2013, https://gsmaintelligence.com/research/ .

significant improvements in spectral efficiency. Enabling greater use of femtocells 5 and tower access and thus higher spatial reuse can also have significant positive impacts.

SPECTRUM ALLOCATION AND ASSIGNMENT

The entire radio spectrum is divided into blocks or bands of frequencies that are used for specific types of services. The spectrum management process is broken up into two general areas: spectrum allocation and spectrum assignment.

Spectrum allocation determines what blocks of frequencies are used for what specific purpose under a set of technical and operational rules. For example, spectrum managers in some countries have allocated 698 to 793 MHz band (a.k.a. 700 MHz band) for mobile services that eventually became 4G/LTE mobile broadband. Spectrum can be allocated on a primary basis in which that service is given priority and is protected from other services that may come in at a later date and create interference to the operations of the primary allocated service. Spectrum can be allocated on a coprimary basis in which its use is also protected in the same manner as a primary service. Secondary allocations are for services that are allowed but must protect all primary (and co-primary) services. For example:

5 Femtocells are discussed in Chapter 9 .

  • Primary allocation in the 3.1 to 3.3 GHz band is Radio Location Service (RLS), which includes S-band radars.
  • Secondary allocation in the 3.1 to 3.3 GHz band is Earth Exploration Satellite Service (EESS) and Space Research Services (SRS).

Spectrum assignment determines who gets to access blocks of the spectrum over a specific geographic region in support of a specific service. This comes in the form of a license or an assignment. A typical example of this would be a major cellular service provider (e.g., Verizon Wireless, AT&T, T-Mobile) licensed to operate specific blocks of spectrum in the 700 MHz band, or the military being assigned a band for its exclusive use. In some cases, spectrum can be accessed through “license by rule” in which a specific entity is allowed to operate but does not have a license. This is also called unlicensed spectrum (United States) and license-free spectrum (EU). One well-known example is the Wi-Fi band at 2.4-2.483 GHz.

U.S. Framework

Radio regulation in the United States began in 1910 with the Wireless Ship Act requiring ocean going ships to have transmitting equipment. The sinking of the Titanic in 1912 precipitated international obligations in wireless communications and eventually in the Radio Act of 1912. The Radio Act provided regulation for licensing all transmitters for interstate and foreign commerce to be overseen by the Secretary of Commerce.

During the 1920s there was an explosion of requests for licenses and burgeoning interference concerns, which were addressed by then Secretary of Commerce Herbert Hoover. The Radio Act of 1927 established a new temporary independent agency, the Federal Radio Commission, with the stated purpose to resolve these numerous interference issues. 6 The commission was empowered to impose rules and regulations for both the licensing and operations of the radio spectrum.

In 1934 Congress passed the Communications Act, which put both wired and wireless communications under the regulatory control of a permanent agency called the Federal Communications Commission. Ever since, the FCC has been directed by five commissioners appointed by the President and confirmed by the

6 Some argue that its ulterior purpose was to protect incumbent interests and limit competition. See T. Hazlett, The wireless craze, the unlimited bandwidth myth, the spectrum auction faux pas, and the punchline to Ronald Coase’s big joke—An essay on airwave allocation policy, Harvard Journal of Law and Technology 14(2), 2001.

Senate for 5-year terms. The President designates one commissioner to serve as chairman. Today the Commission has 7 bureaus and 11 staff offices. 7

The United States has a separate administrative office that manages federal use of the RF spectrum. The Office of Spectrum Management within the NTIA of the Department of Commerce provides this function. Therefore the United States has two separate organizations providing spectrum management: an independent agency, the FCC, for all nonfederal uses and the executive branch office of NTIA for federal uses. In addition to the two regulatory agencies, the U.S. Congress also intervenes in spectrum policy—for example, by directing the reallocation of a band of spectrum and then mandating that the reallocated frequencies be auctioned.

International Framework

Spectrum policy and management at the international scale is broken into cooperative activities across borders in the shape of treaties and regulatory activities within a sovereign nation. The use of RF spectrum is very different than use of other national resources. First of all, RF transmissions cannot be contained at the borders, and thus border agreements between nations to address potential interference scenarios must be addressed. Secondly, uses of the RF spectrum in space (for example, satellite systems) need to be coordinated because the actual transmitters cross international borders.

Cooperation at the international scale for spectrum management occurs both at the global level, in the form of agreements made at the International Telecommunications Union (ITU), and at the regional level, such as the European Conference of Postal and Telecommunications (CEPT) Administration.

The ITU is a specialized agency within the United Nations. It specializes in promoting cooperation for spectrum allocation and global regulation of the radio spectrum. Individual countries sometimes deviate from ITU rules and spectrum allocations, however, because the organization does not have an effective enforcement mechanism for its rules and allocations and thus largely depends on countries to abide by the rules because it is in their own long-term self-interest to do so. The ITU has divided the world into three regions to enable specific rules and spectrum allocations customized to those geographies (see Figure 7.2 ). This methodology may no longer be appropriate because of the global nature of the telecommunication marketplace.

One division of the ITU, the ITU-R (Radio Communication Sector), holds

7 The seven bureaus are Consumer and Government Affairs, Enforcement, International, Media, Public Safety and Homeland Security, Wireless Telecommunications, and Wireline Communications (see Federal Communications Commission, “Bureaus and Offices,” http://www.fcc.gov/bureaus-offices , accessed June 4, 2015).

images

FIGURE 7.2 International Telecommunication Union geographic regions. SOURCE: NASA, NASA Radio Frequency (RF) Spectrum Management Manual , NASA Procedural Requirement (NPR) 2570.1B, effective date December 5, 2008, Figure 1-1 , http://nodis3.gsfc.nasa.gov/npg_img/N_PR_2570_001B_/N_PR_2570_001B_.pdf .

the World Radiocommunication Conference (WRC), where it proposes intergovernmental treaties on spectrum allocations. The most recent WRC was held in 2012, and the next conference is scheduled for 2015. The U.S. delegation is led by a term-limited ambassador specifically appointed for the WRC. The results of a conference are sets of treaties on spectrum allocations and equipment rules. Any such treaties need to be ratified by the U.S. Senate if they are to become binding within the U.S. regulatory framework. There have been multiple occasions where only a limited number of the treaties from a specific WRC are ratified. Therefore the rules and allocations adopted by either the FCC or NTIA are not always in agreement with those of the ITU.

Regional organizations, such as CEPT, are voluntary associations across the member communities. They attempt to develop common policies and regulations across their community and are a focal point for information on spectrum use among its members. An example of regulations would be a series of recommendations for the technical rules for specific services and/or recommendations for how to perform interference analysis on specific systems. Many of the technical rules that are implemented by regulators across the world are based, at least in a small part, on these analyses and recommendations.

U.S. Federal Assignments

Federal frequency assignments are provided by the Office of Spectrum Management within NTIA. NTIA has a formal process in which all federal spectrum users provide advisory support through the Interdepartmental Radio Advisory Committee (IRAC). The following two examples demonstrate how federal departments provide support in securing frequency assignments:

  • National Science Foundation (NSF) . The Electromagnetic Spectrum Management (ESM) unit at NSF is responsible for assisting projects and systems to gain access to the radio spectrum for research. ESM is represented in IRAC and participates in ITU committees. Spectrum uses that come under its rubric include radio telescopes and radio astronomy, radar astronomy, incoherent scatter radar arrays, HF radars, micro- and nanosatellites, S-band radars, and telecom systems for polar programs.
  • National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). The Radio Frequency Management Division is responsible for assisting users within the entire Department of Commerce in obtaining access to the RF spectrum. It is represented in IRAC and participates in the ITU, the Organization of American States Commission for Inter-American Telecommunications, the Space Frequency Coordination Group, and a steering group on radio frequency coordination of the World Meteorological Organization.

The federal government maintains software and informational resources to assist in applying for spectrum assignments for federal use. The Spectrum XXI (SXXI) software was developed to fulfill a need to automate many processes and to standardize spectrum management processes throughout the federal government. 8 SXXI assists in the process of obtaining a frequency assignment and also carries out other support functions, including interference analysis. NTIA also keeps current a Government Master File that catalogs the frequencies assigned to all U.S. federal government agencies in the United States. 9 Nevertheless, security and other concerns obscure how some spectral bands are used.

8 See DISA, SPECTRUM XXI: Spectrum Management in the 21st Century , ITT Advanced Engineering and Sciences, http://www.disa.mil/mission-support/spectrum/jsc-joint-spectrum-center/~/media/files/disa/services/jsc/spectrumxxi_jsc.pdf , accessed June 4, 2015.

9 See “National Telecommunications and Information Administration,” http://www.ntia.doc.gov/ , accessed June 4, 2015.

U.S. Nonfederal Assignments

Nonfederal spectrum use licenses are obtained through the FCC via multiple mechanisms: by rule, direct assignment, auction, or acquisition. There also are means of obtaining experimental and Special Temporary Authority (STA) licenses.

  • License by rule (unlicensed access). This is commonly used for accessing the spectrum by unlicensed devices such as those used in Wi-Fi local area networks. The ability to access the spectrum is defined by the technical rules stipulating that any piece of equipment that follows technical rules may access that portion of the spectrum. The 2.4-2.483 GHz band for Wi-Fi is an example of where such an approach is applied. A variant of license by rule are the nonexclusive licenses now proposed in the 3.5 GHz band.
  • Direct assignment. This is used for systems in which an auction may not be applicable or desirable, such as when there are no competing commercial demands for the band. In this case, the FCC directly provides a license based on requirements that are specific to the band and service type. For example, the mobile satellite service (MSS) spectrum was licensed in this manner.
  • Auction. Since the mid-1990s when Congress first directed the FCC to use auctions, this has been the most commonly understood mechanism for obtaining a commercial RF spectrum license. Since 1994 the FCC has held approximately 100 auctions for spectrum licenses. Each auction has specific rules such as who can participate, bidding mechanisms, and credits for small businesses or new entrants. Almost $100 billion has been generated through auctions in the United States. 10
  • Acquisition. Licenses are often traded between companies. Furthermore, the spectrum holdings of a company that is being acquired is transferred to the parent entity. In both cases, this requires FCC approval. There are cases in which the FCC may not approve such an acquisition if it believes that harm will be done to the consumer. An example of this is when an acquisition would reduce competition and thus increase the potential for monopolistic or duopolistic behavior. 11
  • Experimental license . The FCC allows for scientific research and technical

10 See FCC,“FCC Auctions: Band Plans,” http://wireless.fcc.gov/auctions/default.htm?job=bandplans , accessed June 4, 2015.

11 See, for example, Federal Communications Commission, “Order Dismissing Applications and Staff Report: Staff Analysis and Findings,” https://apps.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DA-11-1955A2.pdf , accessed January 26, 2015.

development without an explicit long-term license. An STA is an experimental license that is not expected to last more than 6 months. 12 , 13

The FCC maintains software and information resources to assist users in applying for spectrum licenses and to understand the current state of licenses across the country. Two resources are particularly useful: the Universal Licensing System 14 (ULS) and the Spectrum Dashboard. 15 The ULS allows a user to search for all of the licenses that have been assigned for a specific frequency band, geographic area, and/or service type. The Spectrum Dashboard allows a user to look at specific frequency bands and to determine which services are allowed, which technical rules are enforced, and which licenses have been assigned.

Challenges of New Allocations

Gaining access to the spectrum for new uses can be a difficult and time-consuming process. As noted, uses of RF spectrum that cross country borders require international coordination. The WRC process, required for new international allocations, can take years if not decades. 16 Even for purely domestic allocations, finding spectrum for new uses is very difficult. Virtually all readily usable RF spectrum has some incumbent user with an interest in maintaining current allocations. Consequently, any new allocation and subsequent assignment will displace the rights of some existing entity, generating opposition to change. As a result, spectrum allocation tends to be an inherently political process with many competing interests. For example, the digital TV transition that ultimately led to the 700 MHz allocation was begun in the 1980s and took two laws—one in 1997 and another in 2006—before the reallocation could be consummated in 2009, with services beginning to be deployed a couple of years later.

12 See Part 5 of the FCC rules governing the usage of the experimental radio service (47 CFR Part 5, available at_ http://ecfr.gpoaccess.gov/ ).

13 The committee is aware of possible changes to the rules regarding FCC experimental licenses, but the impact on remote sensing systems is unclear at present.

14 FCC, “Universal Licensing System,” http://wireless.fcc.gov/uls , accessed June 4, 2015.

15 FCC, “Spectrum Dashboard: Exploring America’s Spectrum,” http://reboot.fcc.gov/reform/systems/spectrum-dashboard , accessed June 4, 2015.

16 An example of this process would be the allocation of spectrum for mobile satellite services (MSS). Initial work in ITU-R in the 1980’s precipitated the WRC-1992 to allocate 1980-2010 MHz and 2170-2200 MHz for MSS worldwide. FCC completed the allocation of the sub-band 1990-2025 MHz and 2165-2200 MHz for MSS in 1997. The technical rules were completed by the FCC in 2000. In 2001 the FCC assigned eight licenses. By 2010 six licenses had been revoked and the remaining two license holders had filed for bankruptcy. By 2012 the band had be reduced to 30 MHz and reallocated to allow mobile terrestrial service and now called AWS-4 (Advanced Wireless Services, Band 4).

SPECTRUM ALLOCATION ISSUES FOR CUBESATS

One of the most important advances in educating the future science and aerospace workforces has been the introduction of the CubeSat program by NSF. In this program, students under faculty supervision design, build, launch, and analyze data from a small satellite, usually a 10 cm cube, with a mass of no more than 1.33 kg. The sounding rocket and balloon programs of NASA were for many generations the vehicles by which future experimentalists were trained. With the advent of CubeSats, that educational experience, for both scientists and engineers, has been extended to actual satellites.

The introduction of CubeSats has also led to a burst of creativity from which it is now being recognized that CubeSats in larger versions, either individually or through constellations, can make important scientific measurements, particularly of Earth and geospace. For example, the 2013 National Research Council report Solar and Space Physics: A Science for a Technological Society 17 anticipates and promotes the concept that constellations of CubeSats will be essential to understanding the space environment of Earth.

The emergence of this new satellite technology, with its unique and in some ways challenging needs for spectrum, has been difficult to accommodate within the deliberative and cumbersome spectrum allocation process. The issue is particularly acute for CubeSats that are for educational purposes, which are, by definition, extremely low-cost and run by students. A complicated bureaucracy for getting a communication license runs counter to the education intent and is a serious impediment to the success of the educational CubeSat program.

There is also confusion about what license to seek. If the educational CubeSat is deemed a government satellite, which most are not, one must download to government ground stations, for which the cost normally exceeds the budget of a low-cost CubeSat. Alternatively, if the CubeSat is not considered to be a government satellite, a license can be sought in the amateur radio band. However, this has become more difficult, since the VHF band for CubeSats has been eliminated, leaving only the UHF band as a possibility.

ESTIMATING THE VALUE OF ACTIVE SENSING

This report offers a number of different ways in which the value of active sensing for research can be estimated. Table 2.5 provides the estimated financial savings to the U.S. economy to which active atmospheric sensing contributes, according to NOAA. Finding 3.2 says, “Active microwave sensors provide unique ocean measure-

17 National Research Council (NRC), Solar and Space Physics: A Science for a Technological Society , The National Academies Press, Washington, D.C., 2013.

ments for scientific and operational applications that are vital to the interests of the United States.” Chapter 4 adds that active microwave remote sensing of the land has proven valuable across a number of science disciplines and practical applications, including geology, urban planning, agriculture and crop management, forestry and biomass assessment, hydrology and water resource management, weather forecasting, generation of topographic maps, sea ice mapping and glacier studies, earthquake and volcano studies, and postdisaster assessment. Chapters 5 and 6 also state that active sensing of the near-Earth environment is essential to understanding space weather and identifying near-Earth objects.

Other benefits certainly flow from this research. Basic research begets advanced research; technologies spin off from research; and training the next generation of scientists and engineers spurs society’s technological progress.

However, many of these benefits are not easy to fully internalize in a market system, so the value of active sensing is very difficult to compare with commercial systems. For example, benefits from advances in weather prediction might be hard to internalize such that private entities would not invest sufficiently in the prediction systems. Also, basic research such as this develops knowledge, which is a public good that is again hard to fully internalize in a market system. Early scientific discoveries can also lead to many different paths of social benefits.

When considering the relative values of various potential services for a given spectrum band, regulators should take into account that the value of the scientific uses of the spectrum is not easy to establish and thus difficult to compare against the value of the commercial uses.

DECADAL SURVEYS OF SCIENTIFIC FIELDS

The National Academies of Scineces, Engineering, and Medicine conducts large surveys of each of the space science disciplines, called decadal surveys, about every 10 years. The surveys, executed by members of the research community, set science and mission priorities for the coming decade. The effort results in a report that provides guidance to the federal agencies supporting the discipline, and the agencies typically set about executing the priorities to the extent possible. The two disciplinary surveys most relevant to this report are the solar and space physics survey and the Earth science and applications from space survey. 18 To date, neither decadal survey has addressed spectrum needs for these communities, although it would be beneficial to do so in the future.

18 The most recent survey of solar and space physics is Solar and Space Physics , 2013. The most recent survey of Earth science is NRC, Earth Science and Applications from Space: National Imperatives for the Next Decade and Beyond , The National Academies Press, Washington, D.C., 2007.

FINDINGS AND RECOMMENDATIONS

Finding 7.1: The U.S. approval process for transmit assignment for environmental radar is too cumbersome, lengthy, and inefficient. The U.S. Interagency Radio Advisory Committee operates by consensus of its members and thus provides numerous opportunities to table or veto applications. Specifically, the allocation for P-band radar allocations is ineffective and encourages only voluntary self-compliance by the applicant.

Finding 7.2: Merit alone will not assure that the spectrum required is available for the scientific community. Scientific interests must be actively engaged in the spectrum allocation and assignment process to assure that science needs are met.

Improving this situation will require ongoing effort in two complementary areas.

Recommendation 7.1: The science community should increase its participation in the International Telecommunications Union, the National Telecommunications and Information Administration, and the Federal Communications Commission spectrum management processes. This includes close monitoring of all spectrum management issues to provide early warning for areas of concern. It also requires regular filings in regulatory proceedings and meetings with decision makers to build credibility for the science community and ensure a seat at the table for spectrum-related decision making that impacts the science community.

This increased participation could be encouraged by organizations such as the International Radio Science Society, the American Astronomical Society, the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, and the American Geophysical Union, and supported by the relevant funding agencies.

Recommendation 7.2: For participation in the spectrum management process to be effective, the science community, NASA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the National Science Foundation, and the Department of Defense should also articulate the value of the science-based uses of the radio frequency spectrum. Such value will include both economic value, by advancing commerce or reducing the adverse economic impact of natural phenomena, and noneconomic values that comes from scientific research.

Finding 7.3: CubeSats that are undertaken for education are essential for the training of the nation’s aerospace workforce. They are at the forefront of the revolution in small satellite technology that is becoming essential to understanding the envi-

ronment of Earth and geospace. However, the spectrum allocation process creates impediments to the success of the educational CubeSat program.

Recommendation 7.3: Given the importance of the educational CubeSat program for the development of the aerospace workforce and for the development of small satellite technology, the National Science Foundation, NASA, the Federal Communications Commission, and the National Telecommunications and Information Administration should undertake a concerted and coordinated effort to eliminate impediments in the spectrum allocation process that are currently inhibiting the success of educational CubeSats.

Recommendation 7.4: The next decadal surveys in solar and space physics (see Recommendation 5.2 ) and Earth science and applications from space should address the future spectrum needs of those communities.

Active remote sensing is the principal tool used to study and to predict short- and long-term changes in the environment of Earth - the atmosphere, the oceans and the land surfaces - as well as the near space environment of Earth. All of these measurements are essential to understanding terrestrial weather, climate change, space weather hazards, and threats from asteroids. Active remote sensing measurements are of inestimable benefit to society, as we pursue the development of a technological civilization that is economically viable, and seek to maintain the quality of our life.

A Strategy for Active Remote Sensing Amid Increased Demand for Spectrum describes the threats, both current and future, to the effective use of the electromagnetic spectrum required for active remote sensing. This report offers specific recommendations for protecting and making effective use of the spectrum required for active remote sensing.

READ FREE ONLINE

Welcome to OpenBook!

You're looking at OpenBook, NAP.edu's online reading room since 1999. Based on feedback from you, our users, we've made some improvements that make it easier than ever to read thousands of publications on our website.

Do you want to take a quick tour of the OpenBook's features?

Show this book's table of contents , where you can jump to any chapter by name.

...or use these buttons to go back to the previous chapter or skip to the next one.

Jump up to the previous page or down to the next one. Also, you can type in a page number and press Enter to go directly to that page in the book.

Switch between the Original Pages , where you can read the report as it appeared in print, and Text Pages for the web version, where you can highlight and search the text.

To search the entire text of this book, type in your search term here and press Enter .

Share a link to this book page on your preferred social network or via email.

View our suggested citation for this chapter.

Ready to take your reading offline? Click here to buy this book in print or download it as a free PDF, if available.

Get Email Updates

Do you enjoy reading reports from the Academies online for free ? Sign up for email notifications and we'll let you know about new publications in your areas of interest when they're released.

Book cover

The International Radio Regulations pp 35–52 Cite as

International Radio Spectrum Management

  • Mohamed Ali El-Moghazi 3 &
  • Jason Whalley 4  
  • First Online: 01 January 2022

235 Accesses

All stations, whatever their purpose, must be established and operated in such a manner as not to cause harmful interference to the radio services or communications of other Members or of recognized operating agencies, or of other duly authorized operating agencies which carry on a radio service, and which operate in accordance with the provisions of these Regulations.

All stations, whatever their purpose, must be established and operated in such a manner as not to cause harmful interference to the radio services or communications of other Members or of recognized operating agencies, or of other duly authorized operating agencies which carry on a radio service, and which operate in accordance with the provisions of these Regulations. The application of the provisions of these Regulations by the International Telecommunication Union does not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the Union concerning the sovereignty or the legal status of any country, territory or geographical area . The RR preamble (2020)

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution .

Buying options

  • Available as PDF
  • Read on any device
  • Instant download
  • Own it forever
  • Available as EPUB and PDF
  • Compact, lightweight edition
  • Dispatched in 3 to 5 business days
  • Free shipping worldwide - see info
  • Durable hardcover edition

Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout

Purchases are for personal use only

Anker, P., & Lemstra, W. (2011). Governance of radio spectrum: License exempt devices. In W. Lemstra, V. Hayes, & J. Groenewegen (Eds.), The innovation journey of Wi-Fi: The road to global success . Cambridge University Press.

Google Scholar  

Ard-Paru, N. (2013). Implementing spectrum commons: Implications for Thailand . Chalmers University of Technology. PhD Thesis.

Codding, G. A. (1991). Evolution of the ITU. Telecommunications Policy, 15 (4), 271–285.

Article   Google Scholar  

Cowhey, P. F. (1990). The international telecommunications regime: The political roots of regimes for high technology. International Organization, 44 (2), 169–199.

ITU. (1979). CCIR 50 Anniversary. Retrieved September 20, 2020 from https://www.itu.int

ITU. (2014). Resolution 185: Global flight tracking for civil aviation PP-14, Busan. ITU.

ITU. (2015). Radio spectrum allocated for global flight tracking . Retrieved September 9, 2020 from https://www.itu.int

ITU. (2019). Constitution of the International Telecommunication Union (Collection of the Basic Texts of the ITU Adopted by the Plenipotentiary Conference (Ed 2019), ITU.

ITU. (2020). Overview of ITU's History . Retrieved September 9, 2020 from https://www.itu.int

ITU. (2021). ITU-R Sector Organization . Retrieved April 14, 2021 from https://www.itu.int

ITU-R. (2003a). Deployment of IMT-2000 systems handbook . ITU.

ITU-R. (2003b). Resolution 229: Use of the Bands 5 150–5250 MHz, 5250–5350 MHz and 5470–5725 MHz by the mobile service for the implementation of wireless access systems including radio local area networks. In Provisional Final Acts - World Radiocommunication Conference (WRC-2003) .

ITU-R. (2011). ITU-R Recommendation M.1652-1. Dynamic frequency selection in wireless access systems including radio local area networks for the purpose of protecting the radiodetermination service in the 5 GHz Band. In M Series. Mobile, Radiodetermination, Amateur and Related Satellite Services . ITU.

ITU-R. (2015a). Handbook on national spectrum management . ITU.

ITU-R. (2015b). M.1036-5 (10/2015): Frequency arrangements for implementation of the terrestrial component of International Mobile Telecommunications (IMT) in the bands identified for IMT in the Radio Regulations . ITU.

ITU-R. (2016a). Resolution 238: Studies on frequency-related matters for International Mobile Telecommunications identification including possible additional allocations to the mobile services on a primary basis in portion(s) of the frequency range between 24.25 and 86 GHz for the future development of International Mobile Telecommunications for 2020 and beyond. In Radio Regulations . ITU.

ITU-R. (2016b). Resolution 809: Agenda for the 2019 World Radiocommunication Conference. In Radio Regulations . ITU.

ITU-R. (2016c). WRC-15 Resolution 810: Agenda for the 2023 World Radiocommunication Conference. In Radio Regulations . ITU.

ITU-R. (2017a). Opinion 103: The activation of radio broadcasting receivers in smart/mobile telephones and tablets. In ITU-R Opinions . ITU.

ITU-R. (2017b). Question 240/1: Assessment of spectrum efficiency and economic value. In ITU-R Questions . ITU.

ITU-R. (2018). Report SM.2093: Guidance on the regulatory framework for national spectrum management , SM Report Series. ITU.

ITU-R. (2019a). Resolution 1-8: Working methods for the Radiocommunication Assembly, the Radiocommunication Study Groups, the Radiocommunication Advisory Group and other groups of the Radiocommunication Sector. In ITU-R Resolutions . ITU.

ITU-R. (2019b). Resolution 5-8 (2019): Work programme and Questions of Radiocommunication Study Groups. In ITU-R Resolutions . ITU.

ITU-R. (2020a). Appendix 1: (REV.WRC-19) Classification of emissions and necessary bandwidths. In Radio Regulations . ITU.

ITU-R. (2020b). Appendix 10: Report of harmful interference. In Radio regulations (Vol. 1). ITU.

ITU-R. (2020c). Appendix 18: (REV.WRC-19) Table of transmitting frequencies in the VHF maritime mobile band. In Radio Regulations . ITU.

ITU-R. (2020d). Appendix 27: (REV.WRC-19) Frequency allotment Plan for the aeronautical mobile (R) service and related information. In Radio Regulations . ITU.

ITU-R. (2020e). Appendix 30: (REV.WRC-19) Provisions for all services and associated Plans and List for the broadcasting-satellite service in the frequency bands 11.7–12.2 GHz (in Region 3), 11.7–12.5 GHz (in Region 1) and 12.2–12.7 GHz (in Region 2) In Radio Regulations . ITU.

ITU-R. (2020f). Appendix 30A: (REV.WRC-19) Provisions and associated Plans and List for feeder links for the broadcasting-satellite service (11.7–12.5GHz in Region 1, 12.2–12.7 GHz in Region 2 and 11.7–12.2 GHz in Region 3) in the frequency bands 14.5–14.8 GHz and 17.3–18.1 GHz in Regions 1 and 3, and 17.3–17.8 GHz in Region 2. In Radio Regulations . ITU.

ITU-R. (2020g). Appendix 30B: (REV.WRC-19) Provisions and associated Plan for the fixed-satellite service in the frequency bands 4 500–4 800 MHz, 6 725–7 025 MHz, 10.70–10.95 GHz, 11.20–11.45 GHz and 12.75–13.25 GHz. In Radio Regulations . ITU.

ITU-R. (2020h). Article 1: Terms and Definitions. In Radio Regulations . ITU.

ITU-R. (2020i). Article 4: Assignment and Use of Frequencies . In Radio Regulations . ITU.

ITU-R. (2020j). Article 8: Status of frequency assignments recorded in the Master International Frequency Register. In Radio Regulations . ITU.

ITU-R. (2020k). Article 13: Instructions to the Bureau. In Radio Regulations . ITU.

ITU-R. (2020l). Article 15: Interferences. In Radio Regulations . ITU.

ITU-R. (2020m). Article 5: Frequency Allocations. In Radio Regulations . ITU.

ITU-R. (2020n). Preamble. In Radio Regulations . ITU.

ITU-R. (2020o). Resolution 7: (Rev.WRC-19) Development of national radio-frequency management. In Radio Regulations . ITU.

ITU-R. (2020p). Resolution 12: (Rev.WRC-19) Assistance and support to Palestine. In Radio Regulations . ITU.

ITU-R. (2020q). Resolution 20: (Rev.WRC-03) Technical cooperation with developing countries in the field of aeronautical telecommunications In Radio Regulations . ITU.

ITU-R. (2020r). Resolution 26: (Rev.WRC-19) Footnotes to the Table of Frequency Allocations in Article 5 of the Radio Regulations. In Radio Regulations . ITU.

ITU-R. (2020s). Resolution 27: (Rev.WRC-19) Use of incorporation by reference in the Radio Regulations. In Radio Regulations . ITU.

ITU-R. (2020t). Resolution 86: (Rev.WRC-07) Implementation of Resolution 86 (Rev. Marrakesh, 2002) of the Plenipotentiary Conference. In Radio Regulations. ITU.

ITU, Geneva ITU-R. (2020u). Resolution 160: (WRC-15) Facilitating access to broadband applications delivered by high-altitude platform stations. In Radio Regulations . ITU.

ITU-R. (2020v). Resolution 750: (Rev.WRC-19) Compatibility between the Earth exploration-satellite service (passive) and relevant active services. In Radio Regulations . ITU.

ITU-R. (2020w). Resolution 752: (WRC-07) Use of the frequency band 36–37 GHz. In Radio Regulations . ITU.

ITU-R. (2020x). Resolution 760: (Rev.WRC-19) Provisions relating to the use of the frequency band 694–790 MHz in Region 1 by the mobile, except aeronautical mobile, service and by other services. In Radio Regulations . ITU.

Ofcom. (2016). UK Report on the outcome of the World Radiocommunication Conference 2015 (WRC-15) . http://ofcom.org.uk

Ryan, P. S. (2012). The ITU and the Internet’s Titanic Moment. Stanford Technology Law Review, 8 , 1–36.

Timofeev, V. (2006). From Radiotelegraphy to Worldwide Wireless, How ITU Processes and Regulations Have Helped Shape the Modern World of Radiocommunications. ITU News (3). Retrieved September 30, 2012, from https://www.itu.int

Download references

Author information

Authors and affiliations.

National Telecom Regulatory Authority of Egypt (NTRA), Giza, Egypt

Mohamed Ali El-Moghazi

Newcastle Business School, Northumbria University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK

Jason Whalley

You can also search for this author in PubMed   Google Scholar

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

Copyright information

© 2021 The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG

About this chapter

Cite this chapter.

El-Moghazi, M.A., Whalley, J. (2021). International Radio Spectrum Management. In: The International Radio Regulations. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-88571-7_3

Download citation

DOI : https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-88571-7_3

Published : 01 January 2022

Publisher Name : Springer, Cham

Print ISBN : 978-3-030-88570-0

Online ISBN : 978-3-030-88571-7

eBook Packages : Economics and Finance Economics and Finance (R0)

Share this chapter

Anyone you share the following link with will be able to read this content:

Sorry, a shareable link is not currently available for this article.

Provided by the Springer Nature SharedIt content-sharing initiative

  • Publish with us

Policies and ethics

  • Find a journal
  • Track your research

IMAGES

  1. ITU regions. Frequencies assignments.

    itu frequency assignment

  2. ITU regions. Frequencies assignments.

    itu frequency assignment

  3. Physical Layer

    itu frequency assignment

  4. 3. Example of ITU Radio Regulations Frequency Allocation Table for the

    itu frequency assignment

  5. ITU Frequency Bands in WDM Fiber Optic Systems

    itu frequency assignment

  6. [PDF] Table 1.2 Frequency Band Designations Label Nominal Frequency

    itu frequency assignment

VIDEO

  1. Katt said a word‼️ #trending #trend #God #creative

  2. Travelogue

  3. RGPV Lateral B.Tech 3rd Sem : Scheme ,Subjects, Previous Year Question Paper

  4. Avantree ANC031 Review

  5. Lofi Chill: Study and Work with Relaxing Beats

  6. Wholesale PU coated wire mesh,sell direct PU coated wire screen Dewatering

COMMENTS

  1. Frequency plans

    Frequency assignment plan for the maritime mobile service in the MF bands in Region 1 GE85-R1-MAR: Planning area: Region 1 Maritime mobile: Planned bands: 415 - 495 kHz; 505 - 526.5 kHz; 1 606.5 - 1 625 kHz; 1 635 - 1 800 kHz and 2 045 - 2 160 kHz: Modifications to the Plan: GE85M Special Sections (published in BR IFIC)

  2. Keeping interference in check: Seven decades of ITU's radio frequency

    For over 70 years, the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) has been publishing its key radiocommunication circular, an important notice containing information on global radio frequency assignments. On July 11, the ITU Radiocommunication Bureau (BR) released the landmark 3,000th edition of the publication, known in the field as the BR ...

  3. PDF 4Chapter 4 Allocations, Allotments and Plans

    A federal frequency assignment may be authorized in a band allocated exclusively for nonfederal- use, as an exception, provided that a) the assignment is coordinated with the Federal Communications Commission ( FCC) ... Regulations, administrations may assign frequencies in derogation of the ITU Table of Frequency Allocations "on

  4. Frequency assignment

    Frequency assignment is the authorization of use of a particular radio frequency. In Article 1.18 of the International Telecommunication Union's (ITU) Radio Regulations (RR), [1] the process is defined as "Authorization given by a frequency administration for a radio station to use a radio frequency or radio frequency channel under specified ...

  5. PDF 4 Chapter 4 Allocations, Allotments and Plans

    The ITU Table of Frequency Allocations is that table contained in Article 5 of the ITU Radio Regulations, 2008 Edition. ... A federal frequency assignment may be authorized in a band allocated exclusively for non-federal use, as an exception, provided a) the assignment is coordinated with the FCC and b) no harmful interference will be caused ...

  6. Frequency allocation

    Frequency allocation. Frequency allocation (or spectrum allocation) is the part of spectrum management dealing with the designation and regulation of the electromagnetic spectrum into frequency bands, normally done by governments in most countries. [1] Because radio propagation does not stop at national boundaries, governments have sought to ...

  7. Article 5

    5.1 In all documents of the Union where the terms allocation, allotment and assignment are to be used, they shall have the meaning given them in Nos. 1.16 to 1.18, the terms used in the three working languages being as follows: Frequency distribution to: French. English. Spanish. Services. Attribution (attribuer)

  8. Spectrum Access: Allocation Policies and the Assignment Process

    The ITU has divided the world into three regions to enable specific rules and spectrum allocations customized to those geographies ... standardize spectrum management processes throughout the federal government. 8 SXXI assists in the process of obtaining a frequency assignment and also carries out other support functions, ...

  9. MIC The Radio Use Website|Frequency Assignment|Frequency Coordination

    The frequency is used for international radiocommunications; 3. it is necessary to conduct coordinating procedures; 4. To obtain international recognition (RR 11). Frequency assignments of notification will be registered if applicable after examinations by ITU of: 1. Conformity to the concerned provisions such as frequency assignment; 2.

  10. Spectrum Rights Assignment

    The RR accommodate a definition of the process of assignment in Article 1.18 as '[a]uthorization given by an administration for a radio station to use a radio frequency or radio frequency channel under specified conditions' (ITU-R, 2020a).Another important provision in the RR is Article 4.2, which states that these assignments which could cause harmful interference should be in accordance ...

  11. PDF Allocations, Allotments and Plans

    The ITU Table of Frequency Allocations is that table contained in Article of the ITU Radio Regulations, 5 2008 Edition. ... A federal frequency assignment may be authorized in a band allocated exclusively for non-federal use, as an exception, provided a) the assignment is coordinated with the FCC and b) no harmful interference will be ...

  12. PDF ITU and the Radiocommunication Sector

    Telegraph & Radiotelegraph Conventions merged: the International Telegraph Union became the International Telecommunication Union. 1947. (Atlantic City) IFRB (International Frequency Registration Board) ITU as UN specialized agency. 1992. (Geneva) ITU-R (Radiocommunication Sector ): RRB (Radio Regulations Board)

  13. PDF Chapter 4 Allocations, Allotments and Plans

    A federal frequency assignment may be authorized in a band allocated exclusively for non-federal use, as an exception, provided that a) the assignment is coordinated with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) ... Regulations, administrations may assign frequencies in derogation of the ITU Table of Frequency Allocations "on

  14. International Radio Spectrum Management

    The ITU-R is the administrative cooperation body responsible for setting the international spectrum management rules through the RR and ITU-R resolutions, recommendations and reports, while the ITU-R BR is mainly responsible of recording and registering frequency assignments and allotments and maintaining the MIFR.

  15. International Telecommunication Union and Access to Spectrum

    The notification of a frequency assignment to the ITU-BR in accordance with Article 11 of the Radio Regulations is the final regulatory step leading to the recording of the frequency assignment in ...

  16. PDF International Telecommunication Union (ITU)

    Recording of frequency assignments and associated orbits in the ITU Master Register (MIFR) Legal rights to international recognition obtained To avoid spectrum warehousing, a time limit of 7 years is set to notify and bring into use frequency assignments to space services ITU Radio Regulations First Come, First Served Concept from WRC-19 ...

  17. Can an AST lose a frequency assignment from ITU for the Q/V ...

    The ITU frequency assignment has a bringing into use (BIU) limitation, which is 7 years from the date of application for assignment (this period can be extended by 6 months). During this period, the company must launch at least one spacecraft and keep it in the target orbit for 90 days, with the ability to receive/transmit at the declared ...