Home Business

TTSL, RCom, others owe Rs 603 cr; Airtel pays highest revenue

Tata Teleservices, Reliance Communications and other private mobile telecom operators owe over Rs 603 crore to the government towards outstanding spectrum charges and licence fee for the last three years. - Markets end flat - 6 of top 10 cos add Rs 24k cr in m-cap; Airtel biggest gainer - 17,370 critical for upside - Vodafone looks to list Indian arm - 3G spectrum auction on schedule: Raja - Bharti Airtel rises 3.4% Bharti Airtel paid the highest revenue, both in terms of spectrum charges as well as licence fee, to the government in the last three years. "TTSL is at top with Rs 351.64 crore outstanding spectrum charges followed by RCom with Rs 118.09 crore as spectrum charges and Rs 48.55 crore towards licence fee outstanding," Minister of State for Telecom Gurudas Kamat said in a written reply in the Lok Sabha. In all, nine private telecom companies are in the list with amounts outstandings against them. Bharti Airtel is at the top in terms of revenues earned by the government during last three years with the company paying Rs 1,355.14 crore as spectrum charges in 2008-09 out of total revenues of Rs 2,927 crore from all operators. Airtel has also an outstanding amount of Rs 56.31 crore. In a market of nearly 500 million mobile subscribers, Airtel continues to be the market leader with over 110 million users, maintaining a market share of about 25 per cent.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):

News of the day
Japan to charge Delhi-Mumbai rail freight corridor
India will ignore the shadow of taint that surrounds Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama when he arrives in Delhi from Mumbai on Monday, and instead applaud two agreements that will be signed tomorrow evening to galvanise industry and infrastructure around the 1,483-km dedicated rail freight corridor between the two cities.
Popular Articles

DTH industry: A glimpse of profits at last!
Things are looking up for the DTH business. Why, then, is everybody so glum?

Indian student flow to Australia may drop 50%
The murder of a 21-year-old Indian national, Nitin Garg, in Melbourne has further tarnished Australia’s reputation for hosting Indian students. For the academic year 2010, overseas education consultants are predicting a 20-50 per cent fall in the number of students applying to Australian universities.