14
SPECTRUM REGULATION IN EUROPE, ECC ACTIVITIES RELEVANT FOR UTILITIES Bruno ESPINOSA, ECO [email protected] www.cept.org/eco www.cept.org/ecc EUTC2012, Warsaw, 26th October 2012

SPECTRUM REGULATION IN EUROPE, ECC ACTIVITIES RELEVANT FOR UTILITIES Bruno ESPINOSA, ECO [email protected]

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: SPECTRUM REGULATION IN EUROPE, ECC ACTIVITIES RELEVANT FOR UTILITIES Bruno ESPINOSA, ECO bruno.espinosa@eco.cept.org

SPECTRUM REGULATION IN EUROPE,ECC ACTIVITIES RELEVANT FOR UTILITIES

Bruno ESPINOSA, ECO

[email protected]

www.cept.org/eco

www.cept.org/ecc

EUTC2012, Warsaw, 26th October 2012

Page 2: SPECTRUM REGULATION IN EUROPE, ECC ACTIVITIES RELEVANT FOR UTILITIES Bruno ESPINOSA, ECO bruno.espinosa@eco.cept.org

Overview

• CEPT, ECC, ECO, who are we?

• European Frequency management framework – Role of ECC - EFIS

• Regulations applicable to Short Range Devices

• ECC considerations on smart grids and smart meterings

Page 3: SPECTRUM REGULATION IN EUROPE, ECC ACTIVITIES RELEVANT FOR UTILITIES Bruno ESPINOSA, ECO bruno.espinosa@eco.cept.org

CEPT, ECC and ECO

regulatory agencies and/or ministries

The ECC is the part of the CEPT that deals with radio spectrum.

ECO: permanent office in Copenhagen.

Page 4: SPECTRUM REGULATION IN EUROPE, ECC ACTIVITIES RELEVANT FOR UTILITIES Bruno ESPINOSA, ECO bruno.espinosa@eco.cept.org

Three main players in spectrum regulation in Europe

European Commission:Single market issuesBinding regulations through specific procedures with MS

ECC:Spectrum allocation and technical conditions for its use48 member countries acting togetherTechnical and regulatory expertise used by EC (Mandate to CEPT)

ETSI:Equipment and system specifications: including ‘spectrum use’ characteristicsRecognised standards body for ‘harmonised standards’Makes ‘System Reference Documents’ which inform and trigger much of the ECC workLargely industry-driven;

Page 5: SPECTRUM REGULATION IN EUROPE, ECC ACTIVITIES RELEVANT FOR UTILITIES Bruno ESPINOSA, ECO bruno.espinosa@eco.cept.org

European Frequency Management Framework

2002 Radio Spectrum Decision

Read more athttp://apps.cept.org/eccetsirel/

Page 6: SPECTRUM REGULATION IN EUROPE, ECC ACTIVITIES RELEVANT FOR UTILITIES Bruno ESPINOSA, ECO bruno.espinosa@eco.cept.org

Role of the ECC in Europe

Consensus and voluntary character: flexible instrument of the national administrations

4 types of deliverable– ECC Decisions– ECC Recommendations– ECC Reports– CEPT Reports

http://www.ecodocdb.dk/

Activities triggered by the national administrations, the EC (Mandate) and ETSI (System Reference Documents)

Page 7: SPECTRUM REGULATION IN EUROPE, ECC ACTIVITIES RELEVANT FOR UTILITIES Bruno ESPINOSA, ECO bruno.espinosa@eco.cept.org

EFIS (ECO Frequency Information System)

Developed by the ECO recognised by the EC as the tool on the harmonized availability of information regarding spectrum use in Europe

Tables of frequency available in EFIS (www.efis.dk):

42 countries, including all EU member states• ITU-R Region 1• European Common Allocation (ECA) Table (also available as document: ERC Report 25)

Data types in EFIS:

1. Allocations (RR, ECA and all the National Tables of Frequency Allocation)2. Applications (National Frequency Utilisation Plans)3. Radio interfaces (mostly ECS and reference documents for unlicensed usage) 4. Documents (related to spectrum usage)5. Right of use info (individual authorisations, mostly for ECS bands)

Page 8: SPECTRUM REGULATION IN EUROPE, ECC ACTIVITIES RELEVANT FOR UTILITIES Bruno ESPINOSA, ECO bruno.espinosa@eco.cept.org

Regulations applicable to Short Range Devices (SRD)

• “Short Range Device” (SRD) is intended to cover the radio transmitters which provide either unidirectional or bi-directional communication which have low capability of causing interference to other radio equipment.

• SRDs are not considered a “Radio Service” under the ITU Radio Regulations (Article 1).

• SRDs in general operate in shared bands and are not permitted to cause harmful interference to radio services

• SRDs in general cannot claim protection from radio services;• SRDs are generally exempted from individual licensing.

Page 9: SPECTRUM REGULATION IN EUROPE, ECC ACTIVITIES RELEVANT FOR UTILITIES Bruno ESPINOSA, ECO bruno.espinosa@eco.cept.org

Regulations applicable to Short Range Devices (SRD)

• Use of SRDs in Europe regulated by Recommendation ERC 70-03 developed and maintained within the ECC

• Describes the spectrum management requirements for SRDs relating to allocated frequency bands, maximum power levels, channel spacing and duty cycle

• Identifies frequency bands for a wide range of applications• Non-specific SRDs• Applications having specific requirements : e.g. alarms, radio

microphones, railway applications, RFID, active medical implants…• Applications for certain short range devices are subject to relevant EC

Decisions• Current trend: focus on technology and application-neutral solutions to keep

flexibility, avoid spectrum fragmentation and foster innovations. Reduce the application specific bands.

Page 10: SPECTRUM REGULATION IN EUROPE, ECC ACTIVITIES RELEVANT FOR UTILITIES Bruno ESPINOSA, ECO bruno.espinosa@eco.cept.org

ECC considerations on smart grids and smart meterings

• So far, considerations in ECC on EUT applications (smart grid, smart metering, Metropolitan Mesh Machine Networks) under the SRD approach.

• Current version of Recommendation 70-03 identifies the band 169.4-169.475 MHz for meter reading under specific technical conditions (500 mW max e.r.p., duty cycle < 10%, Max 50 kHz channel spacing).

• Possibility to use bands for non-specific SRD (e.g. 863-870 MHz) under the associated conditions. But need to cope with the sharing with other applications in these bands.

• Current ECC activities to improve the efficient use of the band 863-870 MHz may offer some perspectives.

Page 11: SPECTRUM REGULATION IN EUROPE, ECC ACTIVITIES RELEVANT FOR UTILITIES Bruno ESPINOSA, ECO bruno.espinosa@eco.cept.org

Work in the ECC on Smart Grids / Smart Metering (and others – under the UHF Roadmap)

Work in ECC on possible extension bands for SRD (870-876/915-921 MHz) was triggered by 4 ETSI System Reference Documents:

ETSI SRDoc TR 102 649-2 (SRD and RFID appl, incl SM/SG, 870-876/915-921 MHz) ETSI SRDoc TR 102 886 (SM in 873-876 MHz)ETSI SRDoc TR 103 055 (SM/SG in 870-876 MHz)ETSI SRDoc TR 103 056 (Alarms/Social alarms 870-876 MHz)

ECC WGSE conducts spectrum compatibility studies, covering compatibility with the existing systems (e.g. governmental services, GSM-R) in the band and in adjacent bands and coexistence between various SRD applications. ECC WGFM SRD/MG collected spectrum inventory information and works on a draft ECC Report 189 which includes identification of the objectives/benefits, assessment of the ETSI request , need for harmonisation as well proposal for choice of frequency regulatory framework and frequency options for each application

Full pan-European immediate harmonisation unlikely because of governmental services in all or parts of the 870-876/915-921 MHz bands in 11 (of 48) countries.

Page 12: SPECTRUM REGULATION IN EUROPE, ECC ACTIVITIES RELEVANT FOR UTILITIES Bruno ESPINOSA, ECO bruno.espinosa@eco.cept.org

Work in the ECC on Smart Grids / Smart Metering

• Smart metering: some opportunities may be offered for smart metering in the UHF band. No exclusive band. Sharing based on application-neutral medium access conditions.

• Smart Grids: because of high reliability, availability requirements and security issues attached, SRD concept (no harmful interference, no protection) may not be applicable to all the applications. To be considered under other available radio regulations (mobile networks, PMR/PAMR, Fixed Services).

• Need to define the requirements before sending request (e.g. through ETSI) to ECC for spectrum harmonisation.

Page 13: SPECTRUM REGULATION IN EUROPE, ECC ACTIVITIES RELEVANT FOR UTILITIES Bruno ESPINOSA, ECO bruno.espinosa@eco.cept.org

Participating in ECC work: where to start

www.cept.org/ecc

Page 14: SPECTRUM REGULATION IN EUROPE, ECC ACTIVITIES RELEVANT FOR UTILITIES Bruno ESPINOSA, ECO bruno.espinosa@eco.cept.org

[email protected]

www.cept.org/eco

www.cept.org/ecc

Thanks for your attention