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VK7AX > WIA 16.11.15 23:02l 93 Lines 4842 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
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Subj: [WIA-News] Geneva, Friday 13 November
Path: IW8PGT<CX2SA<ZL2BAU<VK7AX
Sent: 151116/2151Z 29746@VK7AX.#ULV.TAS.AUS.OC [Ulverstone] $:29746-VK7AX
From: VK7AX@VK7AX.#ULV.TAS.AUS.OC
To : WIA@WW
Geneva, Friday 13 November
Date : 14 / 11 / 2015
Author : Dale Hughes - VK1DSH
It became known as the 15/15 solution; 15 kHz and 15 Watts.
This is the most likely outcome for WRC-15 agenda item 1.4 which considered
the possibility of a new secondary allocation for the amateur service around 5300 kHz.
The fifteen difficult meetings between November 2 and November 11 where the 15/15
solution was developed were the conclusion of work that began at the conclusion
of WRC-12 in January 2012.
Two or three more meetings at increasingly higher levels of authority are necessary
to formally approve the proposal for a new secondary amateur allocation before it
becomes part of the ‘final acts’ of the conference.
After each of the ITU member states sign the final document,
the modified ITU Radio Regulations become an international treaty.
Individual sovereign states then apply the Radio Regulations to their own
particular circumstances.
Under the chairmanship of Dale Hughes VK1DSH, Sub-Working Group 4B1 was assigned
the task of deciding whether or not a new allocation to the amateur service
could be made and to develop the necessary regulatory text for the conference
and ITU Radio Regulations.
In the beginning there were a large number of options presented by contributing
states with proposed allocations being as wide as 175 kHz down to zero i.e.
no allocation.
The task of SWG-4B1 was to reduce these options to (preferably) one option that
was the consensus view of the group.
As the chairman quickly discovered to his chagrin, even the definition of
consensus wasn’t universally agreed, so the overall task looked challenging…
Over time and through a process of sometimes fierce debate,
the possible bandwidth, band edges and power limits for an amateur allocation
were determined and regulatory text was refined.
The resulting two options were ‘No change’ i.e. no allocation and
the 15/15 solution.
At a very late stage the whole process was nearly lost by the ongoing
disagreement between the United Kingdom and Argentina over territory in the
South Atlantic Ocean.
This was satisfactorily resolved in SWG-4B1 by developing compromise
regulatory text, however after the meeting, advice was received that the
text developed by SWG-4B1 was unsuitable.
Late night telephone conversations and email traffic produced other versions of
compromise text for consideration at the meeting the following morning.
But ‘No Change’ was still an option and all could be lost…
During the next higher level meeting (Working Group 4B), the recently changed
regulatory text was accepted with little debate and the remaining objector
removed their ‘No Change’ option leaving the one final single proposal for
15 kHz in the 5315.5 – 5366.5 kHz frequency band with a global 15 W eirp
power limit, with slightly higher limits in some parts of Central and
South America.
The final version of text was approved by WG-4B and the new regulatory text
will proceed to the next meeting of Committee 4 for further review and approval
before it is submitted for first and second readings at least one WRC-15
Plenary meeting; all of that will happen over the next two weeks.
Only when that process is complete can we be completely confident that the
new allocation will be part of the new Radio Regulations.
What does this mean for Australian amateur operators? While the 15 W eirp
power limitation is seemingly harsh, calculations indicated that it is
probably is in accordance with typical mobile usage where a 100 W transmitter
and vertical whip is used.
More problematic is that the frequency band selected by SWG-4B1 was the only
possibility and the situation in Australia is that this band is heavily used
by the Royal Flying Doctor and other important services.
So at this time it is far from clear how this situation can be resolved.
Irrespective of the specific Australian situation, achieving a new global
HF allocation for the amateur service is a remarkable outcome and it is a
result of hard work by many individual amateurs, national amateur societies
and supportive administrations. The ACMA and WIA have been very supportive
and proactive in supporting a possible new amateur allocation around 5300 kHz.
Win-lose-or-draw the most important part of events in the past few weeks is
that the amateur service has presented a united, professional front to the
world community and the views of the amateur service continue to be taken
into account when significant decisions are made.
All amateurs should be proud if this fact.
(Sourced from the WIA Website)
http://www.wia.org.au/newsevents/news/2015/20151114-1/index.php
(Posted to the Packet Radio Network courtesy Tony VK7AX)
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