NEW DELHI--India begins another round of telecommunications airwaves auctions Monday, hoping to spur investment by phone companies and raise billions of dollars for the government.

This will be India's third attempt to auction spectrum in the past 18 months. Two earlier rounds left a large part of the airwaves unsold as operators refused to bid, citing high fees and tough restrictions.

India's telecom sector, at the center of New Delhi's liberalization policies since the 1990s, has lost its shine in recent years as regulatory hurdles, profit-crushing competition and corruption allegations have weighed on optimism about the industry which had brought hundreds of millions of Indians their first phone connections in the past decade.

From Monday, New Delhi will conduct two sets of auctions, one for nationwide use of the 1800 MHz frequency and another to offer cellular-phone services using the 900 MHz frequency in the megacities of Mumbai, Delhi and Kolkata.

Among those expected to bid are British telecommunications company Vodafone Group PLC, and Norway's Telenor ASA and Indian oil and gas company Reliance Industries Ltd., as well as India's Bharti Airtel Ltd.

The auctions are crucial for Bharti and Vodafone India Ltd., whose bandwidth-usage rights are set to expire in Delhi, Mumbai and Kolkata. The companies will have to bid successfully in the auctions to continue operations. The rights to use bandwidth will last for the next 20 years.

Idea Cellular Ltd. and Reliance Communications Ltd., India's third- and fourth-largest telecom companies by number of users, are also expected to bid.

The auctions have been taking place since the Supreme Court canceled licenses of several telecom companies after ruling that the first-come first-serve policy used to allot their licenses in 2008 was illegal and resulted in large losses of potential revenue to the government.

Of the 400 billion rupees ($6.38 billion) the government had hoped to raise through the last two auctions, it was only able to raise 130 billion rupees due to a lack of bidders.

Since then, New Delhi has cut bandwidth prices, eased rules for trading and sharing of bandwidth and lowered spectrum-usage charges to attract more bidders.

India hopes to raise at least 110 billion rupees in much needed nontax revenue through the latest auction. It will be offering airwaves valued at 491.43 billion rupees.

Telecom executives wouldn't predict whether the latest auction would be successful as there are uncertainties about the market that may continue to keep bidders away despite the lowering of some fees and regulations.

Trade lobby Cellular Operators Association of India said the government hasn't gone far enough to ease concerns, which will dissuade operators from bidding more for airwaves.

"It will affect the potential investments to the sector, which is already facing hurdles presently," said Rajan S. Mathews, director-general of COAI.

Write to R. Jai Krishna at krishna.jai@wsj.com

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