CommScope ditches SAS business in 3.5GHz CBRS band

Mike Dano, Light Reading

April 1, 2022

2 Min Read
CommScope ditches SAS business in 3.5GHz CBRS band

CommScope said that, as of May 31, it will no longer sell spectrum-management services for the shared 3.5GHz CBRS spectrum band.

“CommScope has recently made a strategic business decision to realign its focus in the Citizens Broadband Radio Service (CBRS) market. Effective May 31, 2022, CommScope will discontinue providing its cloud-based SAS service portfolio. The company has notified customers and will support their transition to other SAS service providers,” the company confirmed in a statement to Light Reading. CommScope is one of several companies that provides Spectrum Access System (SAS) management services in the CBRS band.

Continued CommScope: “This change has no effect on the company’s Comsearch business unit, which will continue to offer a variety of spectrum management and frequency coordination solutions. CommScope will also continue to offer intelligent wireless solutions and services that support the CBRS frequency band, such as OneCell small cells and Ruckus access points.”

CommScope however confirmed that it will continue to support the Environmental Sensing Capability (ESC) network that it operates with Google for communications in the CBRS band.

A time of change

CommScope’s withdrawal from the SAS business for the CBRS band comes at an important time for the company. As Light Reading recently reported, CommScope also recently decided to pull back on a plan to develop DOCSIS 4.0-based silicon for cable network equipment. CommScope is also undergoing an extensive overview of its business and is preparing to spin off or sell its Home Networks unit. Likely as a result, a number of top CommScope executives are also shuffling or leaving.

But CommScope’s decision to withdraw from spectrum management in the CBRS band may also reflect developments within that particular industry segment. After all, research and consulting firm Dell’Oro Group recently reduced its expectations for sales of equipment running in the CBRS band. The firm said the that fixed wireless access (FWA) portion of the market is developing as expected, but that things seem to be dragging in the areas of private wireless networking and mobile network augmentation.

Others though have a very different view of the CBRS market. “I continue to be very bullish,” Federated Wireless CEO Iyad Tarazi told Light Reading. Federated is another SAS provider, and Tarazi said the company has added 65 new SAS accounts during the past 12 months, and currently manages 100,000 CBRS devices. “We see nothing but growth opportunities” in CBRS, he said.

Tarazi added Federated plans to chase the customers affected by CommScope’s decision.

To read the complete article, visit Light Reading.

 

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