Otago Daily Times

Chorus sets price cap after Bill changes

- PAUL MCBETH

AUCKLAND: Chorus has agreed to a $46 monthly price cap for its anchor service from July after Telecommun­ications Minister Kris Faafoi introduced a suite of changes in legislatio­n governing the industry.

The telecommun­ications network operator set the price on the 100/20megabitp­ersecond service after the Government sought a contractua­l arrangemen­t to rein in the price path before a new regulatory regime comes into place. The price is $49.65 at present, and under the new arrangemen­t, will be cut to $45 for the period covering July 2018 to June 2019. The $46 price will take effect in July next year and will form the initial price cap under the new pricing structure effective in 2020.

‘‘This represents a fairer deal for everyone: a good price for New Zealand broadband consumers, and a reasonable price for Chorus,’’ Mr Faafoi said in a statement.

The minister lodged a supplement­ary order paper in Parliament yesterday making a number of amendments to legislatio­n enabling the new regulated price structure. Parliament’s economic developmen­t, science and innovation select committee noted the likelihood of an SOP being used to protect consumers from price shocks by setting a cap based on an earlier price path.

Chorus chief executive Kate McKenzie welcomed the SOP as providing greater certainty on the treatment of Crown financing, Commerce Commission oversight of exemptions from the business line restrictio­ns, the timeline for deregulati­ng copper lines in fibre areas, and ensuring emergency 111 services are available to vulnerable customers.

‘‘We welcome this step towards a new regulatory framework . . . [and] look forward to the passage of the Bill and to starting work on implementa­tion,’’ she said.

Local fibre companies including Chorus, Ultrafast Fibre, Northpower and Enable got a win with the latest amendments. They propose preventing the minister from recommendi­ng a service in the second phase of the ultrafast broadband network rollout being declared an unbundled product before 2026.

Vodafone New Zealand urged MPs in its submission to encourage investment on fibre networks through unbundling to allow for direct access to the equipment. The telecommun­ications retailer said that was central to promoting competitio­n.

Other proposed changes would limit the way the Commerce Commission can amend the methodolog­y used to set regulated prices.

The regulator’s monitoring regime will also be expanded to cover compliance in ensuring emergency services are available even in the event of a power failure. The commission will have to monitor competitio­n in, and the performanc­e and developmen­t of, the telecommun­ications market and retail service quality within it. It will be allowed to conduct inquiries into any matter relating to the industry or for the longterm benefit of New Zealand consumers.

 ??  ?? Kate McKenzie
Kate McKenzie

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