Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge ROGERS.
In the order on review, the Federal Communications Commission affirmed orders by the Bureau of Wireless Telecommunications granting a waiver of 47 C.F.R. § 22.925 for two years to permit AirCell, Inc. and cellular licensees that had entered into resale agreements with AirCell to provide airborne cellular telephone service.
See Aircell, Inc.,
15 F.C.C. Red. 9622,
I.
Section 22.925 of the Commission’s rules provides, in pertinent part:
Cellular telephones installed in or carried aboard airplanes, balloons or any other type of aircraft must not be operated while such aircraft are airborne (not touching the ground). When any aircraft leaves the ground, all cellular telephones on board that aircraft must be turned off.
47 C.F.R. § 22.925 (2000). Under § 1.3, the Commission has authority to waive its rules “if good cause therefor is shown.” Id. § 1.3.
AirCell, Inc. began developing and testing a low-power cellular system installed on general aviation aircraft under a Special Temporary Authority from the Commission in 1992. Two years later, the Commission’s Office of Engineering Technology authorized AirCell to operate as an experimental radio station, providing service on a secondary basis. Pursuant to 47 C.F.R. § 2.104(d)(3)© and (ii), stations with secondary status “[s]hall not cause harmful interference to stations of primary services to which frequencies are already assigned or may be assigned at later date,” and “[ejannot claim protection from harmful interference” from such primary stations.
The AirCell system consists of specially engineered handsets, ground stations, and so-called “smart” aircraft antennae designed to provide low-power airborne cellular communications without creating harmful interference for other cellular networks. AirCell’s ground stations are co-located in rural areas at the cell sites of participating cellular licensees, and customer traffic from the airborne mobile units is interconnected with the public switched network through the switches of AirCell’s participating licensees. In addition to hardware and software modifications designed to provide cellular communications at relatively low power levels, the AirCell system seeks to minimize the po *962 tential for harmful interference through the use of horizontal polarization, specially shaped antenna patterns, non-standard control channels, and frequency coordination with non-participating cellular providers. The AirCell system was tested by AirCell and petitioners on July 10 and 11, 1997, using four sites in Texas and Oklahoma, and again by petitioners on September 22, 1998, in Florida.
On October 9, 1997, AirCell filed a petition requesting that the Commission waive, among other things, § 22.925 of its rules to permit commercial deployment of AirCell service. Ten months later, AirCell and a number of cellular licensees entering into resale agreements with AirCell filed an amended petition to join the waiver request, thereby establishing that the participating licensees had agreed to modifications of their existing cellular licenses to authorize this secondary use of their licensed spectrum. The Bureau of Wireless Telecommunications (“Bureau”) conditionally granted the waiver requests on December 24, 1998. Determining that the AirCell system’s potential for interference should be evaluated according to its performance under normal operating conditions, the Bureau found that “the record fully supports the conclusion that because of the lower power, special antennas, and other features unique to the AirCell mobile unit, the risk of harmful interference that use of an ordinary cellular telephone! ] in an airborne aircraft poses has been [satisfactorily] addressed.” Consequently, in the Bureau’s view, the harm that § 22.925 is intended to prevent “will most likely not occur,” and special circumstances justified a waiver of the general rule. The Bureau concluded a waiver was also warranted because the public safety benefits to aircraft that will accrue from the use of the AirCell system serve the public interest. Further, the Bureau observed, AirCell’s voice and data link promotes competition by providing small aircraft and general aviation consumers an alternative to existing air-ground services.
The Bureau imposed nine special conditions on the waiver, including the requirement that cellular service to airborne terminals be a secondary service, and that participating licensees provide at least thirty days prior notice of service or testing to co-block licensees with transmitter sites within 270 kilometers of their ground stations. The Bureau’s conditions further stipulated that participating licensees had a duty to provide information promptly on request of the Commission regarding any complaint of interference, and an obligation to resolve any instance of harmful interference, which was defined as “serious degradation, obstruction, or repeated interruption of cellular service.”
On three occasions, the Bureau conditionally granted waivers for additional licensees. In so doing, the Bureau rejected the opposing carriers’ arguments that, among other things, AirCell had taken over obligations of the participating licensees and failed to provide proper advance notice to opposing carriers. On reconsideration the Bureau also clarified several waiver conditions and reduced the notification distance from 270 to 151 kilometers, noting that during the Texas-Oklahoma tests the airborne received signal “was not strong enough to interfere with terrestrial cellular communications, except when the AirCell power control system was deliberately disabled for testing purposes.”
The Commission largely affirmed the Bureau’s orders granting conditional waivers and reset the two-year term of the waivers to begin on June 9, 2000, the effective date of its order. The Commission “agree[d] with the Bureau’s technical assessment of the AirCell system, including its judgment that there is little risk the system will cause harmful interference to non-participating carriers, as well as its *963 evaluation of the system’s potential benefit for general aviation.” Aircell, 15 F.C.C. Red. at 9627. Based primarily on the design characteristics of the AirCell system and the results of the first day of the Texas-Oklahoma field tests on July 10 and 11, 1997, the Commission concluded that AirCell had carried its burden of affirmatively showing that its system is not likely to cause harmful interference to terrestrial cellular operations. The Commission noted that for the July 10,1997, test,
AirCell chose a “worst case” scenario for site location, i.e., the tests were conducted in a rural area where there was no urban noise to mask the AirCell signal, and in a manner such that the AirCell airborne mobile unit was close to the “victim” site and far from the AirCell partner site. With this configuration, the AirCell mobile has to emit its highest power level in order to reach its partner site. Even under this configuration, the data from the first day of testing show that there is little likelihood of harmful interference.
Id. at 9630 n. 60. The Commission rejected as unpersuasive the evidence presented by the opposing carriers and rejected the opposing carriers’ remaining arguments that, for example, the AirCell system violated their exclusive channel block assignments under 47 C.F.R. § 22.905(a), and that their licenses were improperly modified by the AirCell order. By relegating the AirCell system to secondary status in the cellular band and requiring advance notification to help ensure that all primary cellular service is protected from harmful interference throughout the waiver term, the Bureau had, in the Commission’s view, provided nonparticipating licensees with “adequate, indeed redundant, interference protection.” Id. at 9629. At the same time, the Commission disclaimed any reliance on a probability study submitted by AirCell. The Commission added several other technical operating conditions “to ensure that the AirCell system will in fact operate within the technical parameters on which the Bureau’s decision was based.” Id. at 9627.
II.
Petitioners raise a variety of objections to the Commission’s order. We address in Part A whether the Commission violated its rules and the licensing scheme of the Communications Act by allowing AirCell to provide a new nationwide radio communications service without a license. In Part B, we address whether the waiver grant was arbitrary and capricious. In Part C, we address whether the Commission failed to provide a rational explanation for its conclusion that harmful interference was not likely to result from the AirCell system.
Under our standard of review, the court must uphold the Commission’s order unless it is “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or contrary to law.” 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A).
See also Greater Boston Television Corp. v. FCC,
A.
Contending that the Commission “effectively granted the [license] application that AirCell could not file” consistent with Commission rules, petitioners maintain that the Commission also “effectively modified all cellular carriers’ licenses nationwide without complying with Section 316 of the Communications Act, 47 U.S.C. § 316.” There is no merit to these contentions.
The two relevant rules relate to geographic exclusivity and protection from interference. The first, 47 C.F.R. § 22.905(a), provides: “Each channel block is assigned exclusively to one licensee for use in that licensee’s cellular geographic
*964
service area (“CGSA”) (see § 22.911).” The second, 47 C.F.R. § 22.911(d), provides in relevant part: “Within the CGSA determined in accordance with this section, cellular systems are entitled to protection from co-channel and first-adjacent channel interference and from capture of subscriber traffic by adjacent systems on the same channel block.” The Commission’s interpretations of its rules regarding the rights of cellular licensees, including the right to channel block exclusivity and freedom from interference or signal capture within a given CGSA, are entitled to substantial deference.
See Thomas Jefferson Univ. v. Shalala,
There is likewise no merit to petitioners’ contention that AirCell was required to be licensed. See 47 U.S.C. §§ 301, 304, 307-310 (1991 & Supp.2001). So long as the licensees in partnership with AirCell maintain actual control over the transmission equipment used in Air-Cell’s system and continue to abide by their own regulatory obligations, the court has no basis for second-guessing the Commission’s description of AirCell as a “reseller.” Contrary to petitioners’ contention, the Commission expressly rejected the claim that an unauthorized transfer of control of the licensees’ operations to Air-Cell had occurred. The Commission stated that “[i]n the case of a nationwide network such as AirCell is attempting to build, ... the AirCell partners, while remaining responsible for complying with Commission requirements ... may reasonably and prudently assign a single entity the task of being a central contact point for system management and system/site termination purposes.” Aircell, 15 F.C.C. Red. at 9643.
Nor did the Commission contravene its precedent in characterizing Air-Cell’s relationship to its participating carriers as a resale.
See Resale and Shared Use,
Docket 20097,
Report and Order,
For these reasons, the court affirms the Commission’s determination that the only legal obstacle to the launch of AirCell’s system was the bar in § 22.925.
B.
Petitioners’ challenges to the Commission’s waiver of § 22.925 as arbitrary and capricious are also meritless.
In
WAIT Radio v. FCC,
The Commission’s concern has been with the serious risk of harmful interference to terrestrial systems from the greatly enhanced transmitting range of ordinary cellular telephones used aboard airborne aircraft.
See Airborne Use of Cellular Telephones,
7 F.C.C. Red. 23,
In identifying the public interest,
see Keller Communications, Inc. v. FCC,
Petitioners’ remaining challenges need only brief response. First, contrary to petitioners’ contention that the “me-too” waiver process unlawfully delegates authority to private parties by allowing AirCell to arbitrarily exempt any carrier of its choice from the rule with no individualized showing, nothing in the order indicates that the Commission granted AirCell exclusive authority to provide nationwide airborne cellular service. The waiver is limited to two years, and the order does not state that a similar service provider could not also obtain a waiver.
Second, because the opposing carriers did not seek clarification on reconsideration, see 47 U.S.C. § 405, that the waiver did not apply to commercial aircraft, the Commission’s decision and order can hardly be faulted for failing specifically to address commercial aircraft.
Third, petitioners cannot now contend that the protection provided by the secondary status of AirCell’s operation is “illusory” should interference occur because tracing interference to AirCell operations is “infeasible” and recourse to the complaint process will be ineffective. The opposing carriers’ application for review of the Bureau’s waiver orders did not challenge the feasibility of initiating an interference complaint, and hence the Commission was not afforded a fair opportunity to pass on the issue.
See Bartholdi Cable Co. v. FCC,
C.
Although petitioners raise a host of claims in contending that the Commission had no basis for its determination that it was not likely that AirCell’s operations would cause harmful interference to terrestrial cellular systems, the court’s concern is confined to one aspect of the Commission’s explanation.
The parties agree that for terrestrial cellular service to remain effective, the signal from a terrestrial cell phone must sufficiently exceed the electromagnetic noise floor of the location where the call is received, plus whatever interference may be generated by a concurrent AirCell signal (i.e., the so called “signal-to-noise-plus-interference ratio”). AirCell claims, and petitioners do not appear to dispute, that the industry standard for this ratio is 17dB. Conversely, and as a corollary principle, interference from an AirCell signal that falls within the existing noise floor should not be detectable to a terrestrial cell phone user, much less degrade a terrestrial signal utilizing the same frequency within the same CGSA. Apart from this baseline understanding, however, the evidence before the Commission on the levels *967 of harmful interference that AirCell’s system could cause was in conflict.
On the one hand, AirCell submitted reports indicating that there was virtually no chance that its service would cause harmful interference to terrestrial cellular operations. A report prepared by AirCell consultants, TEC Cellular, Inc. (“TECC”), found that virtually all interference from AirCell signals in urban, suburban, and rural areas fell within the existing noise floors of those environments during normal operations. Relying largely on measured signal strength data from the July 10, 1997, test runs, which were designed to simulate “normal” operating conditions (i.e., with all AirCell components operational and airplanes flying point-to-point paths), the TECC report concluded that “fflull scale AirCell operation, properly deployed and engineered, will cause a level of interference to terrestrial calls so low that while it may be detectable with sensitive test equipment, it should be imperceptible to terrestrial callers.” In addition, AirCell submitted a report incorporating the results of a probability study, based also on the July 10, 1997, test data, which concluded that there was only a five-in-a-million chance that an AirCell call could noticeably degrade a terrestrial call.
On the other hand, the opposing carriers submitted contrary analyses of the test data. For example, an engineering report submitted by Dr. William C. Y. Lee, Vice President and Chief Scientist, and Mark Schulz, Technology Director of the Strategic Technology Group of AirTouch Communications, Inc., concluded, based on the July 10 and 11, 1997, test data, that harmful interference was likely to occur 30% of the time. They based this conclusion on the assumption that the test runs employed on both days are equally probable to occur during actual operations, and that a minus 124 dBm interference threshold should be employed in calculating the likelihood of harmful interference, rather than the minus 117 dBm threshold used for acceptable voice quality in the interference assessment submitted by AirCell, or the minus 110 dBm threshold used in the TECC report as a reasonable lower limit on an acceptable ground call. In addition, Dr. Lee and Mr. Schulz claimed that there was no test data below the 5000’ altitude level, notwithstanding a “disturbing trend” showing higher interference levels at progressively lower altitudes, and that there was no mechanism in the AirCell system to terminate and block calls below 5000’.
The Commission adequately explained why it rejected the July 11, 1997, Texas-Oklahoma test data and the September 22, 1998, Florida test data upon which petitioners rely. The July 11, 1997, test runs were conducted without the dynamic power control element, which eliminated the benefits of one of the main components of the AirCell design. In addition, the flight patterns employed on that date were abnormal, such that the Commission concluded that they simulated conditions approximating a “major malfunction.” Aircell, 15 F.C.C. Red. at 9630. For similar reasons, the Commission discarded the Florida test results, which also involved abnormal flight patterns around a “victim” cell site at close range and low altitude. The Commission further noted that the opposing carriers had installed the wrong type of antenna during the Florida test, did not record the AirCell mobile transmitter power output, and deliberately matched the supervisory audio tone to prevent the Air-Cell telephone from hanging up once it had lost a usable signal from the AirCell ground station. In addition, given its view that the results of the second day of the Texas-Oklahoma tests and the Florida tests were unreliable, the Commission sufficiently justified its rejection of the opinions of the chief operating officers of six major cellular carriers for lack of credible *968 supporting evidence. Finally, the Commission reasonably explained that concern about interference from uptilted antennas was adequately addressed by the ordinary coordinating process that every cellular licensee must conduct under Commission rules.
However, in rejecting the report of Dr. Lee and Mr. Schulz, the Commission provided no such clarity as to its choice of the appropriate interference threshold. Rather, the Commission simply stated that they had relied on “unrealistic assumptions, including the use of an unrealistically low interference threshold.”
Id.
at 9631. In the Commission’s view, use of a threshold of minus 124dBm was “too conservative and ... an interference threshold of minus 117 dBm is more realistic for typical analog systems.”
Id.
at 9631 n. 67. This may be so, and the court would otherwise defer to the Commission’s expertise.
See Keller Communications,
The only other clarification that the Commission provided was a conclusory assessment, again without further explication, that “[biased on our review of the evidence, it appears to us that use of the latter [minus 117 dBm] threshold would have led to a finding that AirCell would cause a significant level of harmful interference 0% of the time.” Id. Obviously, this does not fill the void. Nor, of course, can the fact that AirCell used the minus 117 dBm threshold in its own report suffice to explain the Commission’s choice. That petitioners may not dispute the results of applying different dBm thresholds to the test data likewise does not fill in the gap, as the Commission appears to suggest in its brief. The Commission’s failure to justify adequately its choice of an interference threshold thus implicates its additional failure to explain how it was able, in the absence of a probability study, to translate the raw signal data from the July 10, 1997, field test into a finding that AirCell’s system “would cause a significant level of harmful interference 0% of the time” in the real world.
Conclusory explanations for matters involving a central factual dispute where there is considerable evidence in conflict do not suffice to meet the deferential standards of our review. Basic principles of administrative law require the agency to “ ‘examine the relevant data and articulate a satisfactory explanation for its action including a rational connection between the facts found and the choice made.’”
U.S. Telecom Ass’n v. FCC,
Notes
. See 47 U.S.C. § 402(a) (1991);
Capital Cities Communications, Inc. v. FCC,
