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CEA Says ‘Underused’ Broadcast Airwaves Cost $14,444 a Minute
5/5/2011
ARLINGTON, VA.: Broadcasting is costing the country $14,444 a
minute. So says the Consumer Electronics Association, one of the most
aggressive supporters of the National Broadband Plan and a long-time frenemy of
broadcasting. The lobby has set up a “Spectrum Crunch Clock,” similar to the
National Debt Clock, which flashes an ever-increasing sum like a rogue gas
pump. Says the CEA:
“The . . . Federal Communications Commission unveiled a bold plan to address
the nation’s shortage of wireless broadband capability by repurposing unused
broadcast spectrum, but intense lobbying by broadcast television stations has
stalled progress on this vital program.”
So the CEA launched it’s clock “to help Americans visualize the economic costs
of delay in spectrum reform.” The lobby says it has “calculated the value of
lost opportunity to the U.S. economy and American consumers. Each minute the
spectrum is not reallocated to higher value services, the American public is
realizing a lost opportunity cost of $14,444, or $7.6 billion each year.”
The underlying math is not described, but it appears to be based on the
assumption that the 120 MHz of broadcast spectrum targeted for broadband
redesignation will bring $33 billion at auction. The clock is at $33.273
billion and counting up by the second. The National Association of
Broadcasters is likely formulating their response to the CEA’s
Spectrum
Crunch Clock.
And so it was. What the NAB’s Dennis Wharton said:
“Instead of engaging in productive dialogue, we’ve come to expect childish gimmicks and hysteria from our CEA friends. The facts are these: broadcasters gave back 108 MHz of spectrum less than two years ago, some of which has yet to be deployed. NAB has never opposed the notion of broadcasters voluntarily giving back additional spectrum, so long as non-volunteers are held harmless. Finally, we would suggest that CEA ask whether Alabamans who are crediting local television with saving their lives during tornado coverage last week whether TV spectrum is ‘underutilized.’”
~ Deborah D. McAdams
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