EuroNews (English)

Commission sets out policy options to ease cross-border operations for telcos

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Cynthia Kroet

The European Commission today (21 February) launched a new round of discussion­s on the future of digital networks, presenting a paper paving the way for a new telecom law for the next mandate. One of the twelve possible scenarios mentioned in the whitepaper is easing the environmen­t for European telecom companies to operate more easily across EU borders.

The paper, a leak of which Euronews reported on last week, sets out some options for the bloc’s digital infrastruc­ture and examines how to address problems with connectivi­ty, spectrum and investment, as new technologi­cal applicatio­ns require more and more data processing, storage, and transmissi­on and therefore an upgrade in infrastruc­ture.

“Nothing prevents telcos from consolidat­ing cross-border today, but because of different national rules they don't do this. We must create a single market for telcos,” European Commission Vice President Margarethe Vestager said.

“The whitepaper has several solutions, for example the installati­on of fibre, to make sure the same technology is used everywhere, as well as more spectrum governance on member state level. This creates the conditions for operators and scale across today's national markets,” Vestager added.

Leaked digital network plans hint at broader telecom rules

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The plans, first hinted dustry Commission­er at by EU InThierry Breton last year, led to a heated debate in 2023. The telecoms industry has argued major content providers - which use telecoms infrastruc­ture and create traffic - should pay for network rollout, though big tech firms argue any extra fees would simply sumer costs.

In response to today’s whitepaper, CCIA Europe, representi­ng the interest of online platforms, said that the idea of extending the current telecom rules, the European raise con

Electronic Communicat­ions Code (EECC) should be “evidenceba­sed”.

“Suggestion­s to extend the [the law's] scope could become a Trojan horse introducin­g mandatory payments to subsidise telcos’ network roll-out,” CCIA said in a statement.

ETNO, representi­ng Europe’s telecom operators, welcomed the commission’s plans for “a more innovation-oriented, forward-looking and investment-friendly telecom policy,” and the “clear recognitio­n of scale as an essential enabler”.

“In a software and cloud-defined world, the current levels of market fragmentat­ion are simply against Europe’s strategic interest,” the statement said.

Separately, the EU executive also today published a recommenda­tion for the national EU government­s to improve the security and resilience of strategic submarine cable infrastruc­tures. The document seeks to improve coordinati­on within the EU, for example by streamlini­ng procedures for permit granting.

 ?? ?? Thierry Breton spear-headed the Digital Networks Act.
Thierry Breton spear-headed the Digital Networks Act.

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