Advertisement
Promo

Network management Toolkit in association with http://ad.doubleclick.net/clk;217618582;14453422;e?http://www.citrix.com/lang/English/lp/lp_1688615.asp

EC telecoms overhaul sparks alarm

Jo Best silicon.com

Published: 29 Jun 2006 15:50 BST

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

Brussels is threatening a complete overhaul of the way the telecoms sector is controlled.

Viviane Reding, information society commissioner for the EC, announced in a speech yesterday that the Commission would like to see aggressive changes to the market, aimed at boosting competition and investment in the sector.

Reding told a German IT trade association yesterday: “I call on member states to prove they really mean what they say in their Sunday speeches about growth and jobs.”

Among the changes Reding proposed are a single European agency to distribute spectrum to operators; increased pressure on telcos to adopt “structural separation” — splitting their services units from their wholesale units; and the creation of one regulator to govern the whole of the telecoms sector across the EU.

The regulator will resemble the European System of Central Banks in structure, with local watchdogs responsible for analysing local market conditions and reporting back to the EU’s uber-regulator.

According to the EC, the new watchdog is necessary to ensure European law is applied equally across the continent, not as strictly as each country's regulator sees fit. This lack of harmony, says Reding, gives some countries an advantage over others, which is “unacceptable” and “an obstacle to the internal market to effective competition”.

Not so, says UK telecoms watchdog Ofcom. A spokesman said: “We don’t think this is the way to deal with the problems the Commission has identified. National regulators are closer to local markets and can understand them better.” Etno (European Telecoms Network Operators Association) also criticised the plans, saying Reding has increased regulation instead of removing it as she promised. Competition, it maintains, is fine as it is without adding a new body to supervise the industry.

Although the scheme has already divided opinions, it has won its supporters. Steen Clausen, managing director of the European Competitive Telecoms Association (Ecta), gave the single regulator approach a guarded welcome - adding that much about the scheme needs to be worked out.

Clausen said: “The idea certainly merits attention and discussion and there’s a lot of good things happening. But it will be difficult to find someone in Brussels with enough understanding of the local minutiae to propose good legislation.”

Reactions from UK telecoms operators were more muted. A spokesman for O2 told ZDNet’s sister site, silicon.com: “There are different aspects to each market and we don't necessarily think this is a good thing. They’re there to protect the UK consumer and they behave in a different way to those in other countries.”

A spokesman for incumbent BT, which has already had run-ins with the UK’s telecoms watchdog over ‘structural separation’ leading to the creation of its broadband access unit BT Openreach, added the telco and the UK market had little to fear from the proposed changes. “We’re a little further down the line than some of the other European markets,” he added.

While BT has already gone through its tiffs with the regulator and come out the other side, other incumbents are likely to bristle at the suggestion of ‘structural sharing’, particularly Deutsche Telekom, owner of T-Mobile, which is spending €3bn on its next-generation network.

Lars Goddall, principal analyst at research company Forrester, said Reding’s approach to structural sharing leaves a lot to be desired in the case of high-speed fibre broadband networks, such as Deutsche Telekom’s.

He said: “I think if the Commission wants to impose these types of rules they’re up against practical restraints as well as philosophical restraints. You can’t take the approach to copper local loop unbundling and apply it to fibre. It’s completely wrong to impose network sharing on fibre.”

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendlyPrint with EPSON

Did you find this article useful?
316 out of 409 people found this useful


Full Talkback thread

0 comments


Company/Topic Alerts

Create a new alert from the list below:








Related Citrix Resources

Achieving the lowest server virtualization TCO

Consolidation through server virtualization is a powerful agent for datacenter change, but...

Achieving the lowest server virtualization Total Cost of Ownership

Consolidation through server virtualization is a powerful agent for datacenter change, but...

Citrix XenDesktop: The Best Desktop Delivery System For Today's Demanding Business Needs

Whether you're considering your first virtual desktop solution or trying to salvage an existing...

Desktop Virtualization: A buyer's checklist

Desktop virtualization should do more than just move desktop management to the datacenter—its real...

Five reasons why you need Citrix Essentials for Hyper-V now

This paper explores common challenges associated with server virtualization deployments and the...

See All White Papers

Video icon

Video

On The Road Blog

Mobile apps to get pushy, have presenc...

Most of the time, computers sit there waiting for you to ask them to do something. Phones tell you when they have something you care about. Most smartphones are more like a computer... More

Post a comment

Mobile business social network tools c...

The APIs that RIM is opening up for the BlackBerry platform leapfrog what’s available on other mobile platforms, with free push updates, unified advertising and payment options and... More

Post a comment

The Crabble stand for your phone

Sometimes something comes along that is so simple yet so very useful that you can’t believe you didn’t think of it first. The Crabble is one such object. Once upon a time smartphones... More

Post a comment


Skip Sub Navigation Links to CNET Brand Links

Help

Become part of the ZDNet community.

Newsletters