The European Commission today adopted new
recommendations on the retail and wholesale comms markets, which it said
should be subject to telecom-specific regulation. This cuts the list of
regulated markets to nine, half the number the original 2003 recommendation
listed.
EU Telecoms Commissioner Viviane Reding argued that where telecoms markets
tended towards effective competition, sector-specific regulation would no longer
be needed. She pointed the way forward by saying that, "We should instead
concentrate regulation on those markets where structural competition problems
persist, such as access to high-speed broadband services. This is where almost
all of the national telecoms regulators have identified serious, and sometimes
even growing, competition problems." The recommendations are applicable today,
the EC said.
However, Ovum analyst Matthew Howett said that reducing the list of regulated
markets by 50 per cent immediately was a "reason for some concern, since we
become reliant on a system of ex-post regulation, which has so far failed to act
as a credible deterrent".
Howett also commented that the inclusion of [optical] fibre in the access
market definition is interesting. "This will require operators to open their
ducts and share infrastructure with competitors,"he explained. Such a move may
clash with UK comms regulator Ofcom's
approach, published in September. In Future Broadband : Policy approach to
next generation access, Ofcom said that, "Intervention to secure NGA
investment today is premature, but should not be ruled out if circumstances
change."
Another recommendation is the creation of a European Telecom Market Authority
(ETMA), which industry experts say would "consult" over decisions taken
nationally rather than perform some sort of EC super-regulation. There are also
plans to offer national comms regulators the option of separating incumbents'
access networks from incumbents, if all other means have failed. Plans were also
put forward for radio spectrum liberalisation and secondary trading of bandwidth
purchased but not used.
Howlett questioned whether all the proposals would survive, but pointed out
that, "If we consider the style that we have become used to from the
Commissioner, with first-class negotiation skills, Reding will initially take
the most ambitious stance, knowing that after compromising she will get the deal
she really wants.”
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