Monday, July 20, 2020

Australian authorities turn down request for 70 MHz allocation

There was a news item on the Internet recently about how the Australian regulator was not considering an allocation at 70 MHz for radio amateurs.

“We note the continued interest in this band from the amateur community. The ACMA will not be further investigating this matter at this time.

The ACMA considers that operating amateur services in this frequency range is not feasible as it would be inconsistent with ITU Radio Regulations and existing services are already operating in the frequency range. 

This frequency range is used by a variety of fixed and land mobile services as supported under the VHF mid band (70–87.5 MHz). Class licensed devices authorised under the LIPD Class Licence operate in the frequency range 70–70.24375 MHz.”

This was the reply to a submission to an earlier submission by the Wireless Institute of Australia (WIA) to the ACMA which essentially consisted of a single sentence... "10. The WIA still has an interest in an allocation at 70 MHz."

ITU Region 3... As can be seen from the map below, Australia is in ITU Region 3 while nearly all of the 70 MHz allocations are in Region 1 countries.


It's a pity that something like a 4m beacon couldn't be established in Australia or even a or a few experimental licences for the band.

It would be interesting to see if say someone in Perth on the west coast (VK6) could investigate if there is a multi-hop Sporadic-E path across the Indian Ocean to South Africa or up to the Middle East.

What would be good is for one of the smaller countries in Region 3 to give a small allocation for the 4m band which would then set a precedent. Even a 200 kHz wide segment of spectrum dedicated to weak signal modes would satisfy most requirements.

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