EMF: Ofcom propose new Amateur Radio licence conditions
Ofcom has ignored the advice of many highly-regarded organisations and are pressing ahead with unnecessary changes to licences that will impose a significant bureaucratic burden on licensees
Radio amateurs have been operating for over a century yet in all that time Ofcom is unable to cite a single health issue resulting from a station's EMF. It is completely inexplicable as to why Ofcom would wish to impose these regulations on radio amateurs.
In the consultation document Ofcom says "penalties for breach of a spectrum licence can include an unlimited fine and/or prison sentence of up to 51 weeks in England and Wales (or 6 months in Scotland and Northern Ireland)."
Ofcom are now conducting a public consultation on the implementation of the new licence regulations which will apply to any licence that permits more than 10 watts EIRP, which is all amateur licences.
Responses from radio amateurs and other interested parties must be submitted by 5pm on November 16, details at
https://www.ofcom.org.uk/consultations-and-statements/category-1/limiting-exposure-to-emf
The new consultation document with the proposed licence changes is at
https://www.ofcom.org.uk/__data/assets/pdf_file/0017/204056/emf-implementation-consultation.pdf
Among comments to the first EMF consultation were:
BAE Systems described Ofcom's proposals as "at best nugatory and at worst counter-productive."
Sky pointed out that EMF exposure is already managed under product safety legislation, health and safety legislation and planning policy, and said
"it was unclear why Ofcom was now proposing to introduce additional and unnecessary burdens on operators."
The Royal Yachting Association (RYA) said it did not believe the proposals were a proportionate response to the identified issues and would be impossible to enforce. It said Ofcom had offered no evidence of the existing regulations being broken by maritime users.
SeaCall said the 10 Watt threshold was far too low, especially where exposure is brief. It pointed to the lack of evidence of harm to human health from transmissions below 100 Watts as long as a 1 metre separation was observed
Ofcom EMF Calculator
https://www.ofcom.org.uk/__data/assets/file/0018/204057/emf-calculator.xlsx
