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The RSGB has fundamental and grave concerns about the decision of Ofcom and the European Union to permit the continued operation of data-over-mains devices (PowerLine Adaptors, or PLA), which provide local Ethernet communication using the house mains wiring. (PLT refers to the more generic description of this technology—PowerLine Telecommunications).
The RSGB is not prepared to allow the HF radio spectrum to be consigned to history, as this spectrum has always provided, and continues to provide, the only means of infrastructure-independent, long-distance point-to-point communications. It is used by broadcasters, who are now rolling out the new DRM digital technology, military, aviation, safety of life, diplomatic/government services, low power devices (including medical) and The Amateur Radio Services. The HF Radio Spectrum is a valuable natural resource, where the proper management of man-made noise through international standards has been achieved over the last half century. The combination of standards requiring low interference from non-radio devices, and disciplined frequency allocation by ITU, has allowed all forms of radio service to co-exist and operate as intended.
This equilibrium is now being severely disturbed by the roll-out of devices which exceed existing standards by a considerable degree over much of the short wave spectrum, and it is this that the RSGB is resolved to reverse.
The EMC Directive of the European Union requires that:
Equipment shall be so designed and manufactured……..to ensure that ……the electromagnetic disturbance generated does not exceed the level above which radio and telecommunications equipment …… cannot be operated as intended (Essential Requirements (1) in Annex 1, relating to Article 5 of the Directive)
Furthermore, although the PLA units, as measured by RSGB and other test houses, are helpfully notched to minimise interference in the amateur frequency bands, they nevertheless produce conducted emissions which will result in interference across much of the rest of the HF Radio Spectrum. The conducted emissions significantly exceed the limits defined in the benchmark relevant international standard CISPR22 (Harmonised EU Standard EN55022).
The RSGB has clear evidence that the use of this equipment is such that it will inevitably cause interference to other radio systems—most notable reception of short-wave broadcasting and DRM. The RSGB contention, therefore, is that not only are the relevant international standards exceeded by up to 1,000 times in terms of the emission of conducted power, but that these emissions inevitably cause radio equipment in the vicinity to fail to ‘function as intended’, contrary to the essential requirement of the EMC Directive.
The RSGB has been in discussion and correspondence with Ofcom, BIS (the Government Department for Business, Innovation and Skills) and the European Commission over this problem, and these exchanges can be followed in the documents below.
The RSGB position Statement following these meetings and exchanges can be read here.
The Society will continue to seek every avenue to argue the case for restraint and common sense in the deployment of PLA devices until a sensible solution is reached which adequately protects the radio spectrum.
The RSGB and Ofcom: index of correspondence and statements
- Letter to Mark Lancaster MP regarding Parliamentary Adjournment debate on PLT
 25 May 2011
- RSGB detailed response to Ofcom statement of 27 April 2011 on PLT
 25 May 2011
- RSGB response to latest Ofcom statement on power line adaptors
4 May 2011
- Letter to European Commission following meeting of 16 Dec 2010
 6 January 2011
- Further letter to Octavian Popescu regarding meeting to be held on 16 December
 13 December 2010
- Letter to Octavian Popescu regarding meeting to be held on 16 December
 7 December 2010
- Response from Simon Hicks of BIS to RSGB letter of 15 October
 7 December 2010
- Reply from European Commission
 22 October 2010
- Letter to Simon Hicks, Head of Technology (Electronic Communications and Content), BIS
 15 October 2010
- Letter to Jill Ainscough, Chief Operating Officer, Ofcom
 9 September 2010
- Letter to Pedro Ortun Silvan, Director, DG Enterprise, European Commission DG
 8 September 2010
- Reply from DG Enterprise
 1 September 2010
- Reply from BIS
 19th July 2010
- Letter to Pedro Ortun Silvan, Director, DG Enterprise, European Commission DG
 28 June 2010
- Letter to Ed Vaizey, Minister for Culture, Communications and Creative Industries
 11 June 2010
- RSGB writes to Ofcom over the "6dB Trial"
24 May 2010 
- Ofcom reply to RSGB letter of 14 March 2010
13 April 2010
- RSGB Letter to Ofcom Chairman
14 March 2010
- PLA/PLT and Ofcom: RSGB Statement
17 February 2010
- Spectrum Defence Fund announced
January 2010
- Ofcom reply to RSGB official complaint to Ofcom about Comtrend Power Line Adapters
25 September 2009 
- RSGB response to Ofcom statement on Power Line Adaptors
4 September 2009
- Ofcom PLT statement on the Ofcom website
3 September 2009
- RSGB makes an official complaint to Ofcom about Comtrend Power Line Adapters
31 July 2009 
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