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Iain Nicol Assistant Director DTI Standards and Technical Regulations Directorate

Iain Nicol Assistant Director DTI Standards and Technical Regulations Directorate Responsible for EMC Directive. UK Administration position on PLC - Introduction. Commitment to “Broadband Britain” Necessary mix of Technologies

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Iain Nicol Assistant Director DTI Standards and Technical Regulations Directorate

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  1. Iain Nicol Assistant Director DTI Standards and Technical Regulations Directorate Responsible for EMC Directive

  2. UK Administration position on PLC - Introduction • Commitment to “Broadband Britain” • Necessary mix of Technologies • Trade off between telecom service and disturbance unavoidable and common to many broadband technologies • Aim to reduce uncertainty • Broadband deployment goal in the context of the wider public interest

  3. UK Administration position on PLC – Structure of presentation • PLC in the UK • UK history with setting enforcement limits for emissions from DSL and PLC • Complaints and the likelihood of interference • Cumulative effects • EMCD and the role of standards • A way ahead/conclusions

  4. UK Administration position on PLC – PLC in the UK so far • Technical trials in Scotland • Emission levels similar to those recorded in other MSs trials • Crieff technical trials successful and commercial trials now started

  5. UK Administration position on PLC– Technical Trials in Scotland

  6. UK Administration position on PLC – PLC in the UK so far • Technical trials in Scotland • Emission levels similar to those recorded in other MSs trials • Crieff technical trials successful and commercial trials now started

  7. UK Administration position on PLC - History with setting enforcement limits for emissions from DSL and PLC • Limits for ADSL in MPT1570 • No current similar provision for VDSL and PLC • Administration forced to apply compromise limits and operators able to rollout ADSL

  8. UK Administration position on PLC - History with setting enforcement limits for emissions from DSL and PLC • Limits were based on a lower estimate of disturbances than suggested by the broadcasters • 1.4 million ADSL lines and one confirmed complaint

  9. UK Administration position on PLC –History with setting enforcement limits for emissions from DSL and PLC • Introduction of enforcement limits for VDSL and PLT held to see if the CLC/ETSI JWG can find a solution • Consensus on technical grounds seems unlikely

  10. UK Administration position on PLC –Complaints and Interference • Clear that emission levels have the potential to disturb radio services (mainly in HF bands) • However there may not be a complaint • SW listeners v on-line radio • Interference from existing sources

  11. UK Administration position on PLC –Complaints and Interference • Other methods of dealing with possible interference • Probability of interference cannot be estimated by reference to unintended emissions levels at a particular point

  12. UK Administration position on PLC –Cumulative Effects • Theoretical models suffer from lack of practical evidence with which to validate them • Several million ASDL lines and some sizable PLC installations seem to work with no obvious detrimental cumulative effect

  13. UK Administration position on PLC –EMCD and the role of standards • How to apply EMCD to systems? • Regulatory certainty from Harmonised Standards would be ideal • Impossible to measure real systems • Not what is injected into the system that matters but what is radiated as a result • Any standard must be realistic

  14. UK Administration position on PLC –A Way Ahead • More trials • No one technical standard • Undertakings on handling problems • Complaints should be “real life” • No absolute assurances • Public interest • Better methods of assessing PLC/HF interference

  15. UK Administration position on PLC –Conclusion • Compromise on the risk of interference v. ability to deploy • Affordable Broadband needed in Europe • A Standards solutions seems unlikely in near future • Local limits still possible but undesirable • Would prefer a Europe-wide solution

  16. END

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