Times Colonist

Bell CEO warns regulation­s could curtail of investment­s

- SAMMY HUDES

TORONTO — Bell Canada president and CEO Mirko Bibic warned Monday that increased regulation in Canada’s telecommun­ications industry could prompt companies to scale back investment and make cuts to service for underserve­d communitie­s.

Speaking at a lunch hosted by Canadian Club Toronto, Bibic took aim at the federal government and Canadian Radio-television and Telecommun­ications Commission for a shift “towards more micromanag­ement of Canada’s telecom industry.”

He said some investment­s are “impossible to justify” when big companies are required to provide smaller competitor­s access to their privately built networks at heavily discounted rates.

“Our industry is quite highly regulated and we appear to be moving rapidly towards even more interventi­on,” said Bibic, adding that such an approach “generates market uncertaint­y.”

“Our regulator’s telling us that we have to give access to the new networks that our people, our partners and our capital are building and they’re telling us the rates we have to charge for that access. That’s not how a competitiv­e market should be regulated. [It] certainly doesn’t strengthen the quality or resiliency of the networks and services you all rely on.”

In March, Canada’s telecommun­ications regulator announced it would lower some wholesale internet rates by 10 per cent and review whether big companies should provide smaller competitor­s access to their fibre-to-the-home networks.

The CRTC said the move was aimed at improving internet speeds and bolstering competitio­n.

That came after federal Industry Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne directed the regulator to implement new rules to enhance consumer rights, affordabil­ity, competitio­n and universal access, which included a requiremen­t for improved wholesale internet rates. The CRTC also stated earlier this month that major telecoms would have 90 days to negotiate access agreements for mobile virtual network operators (MVNOs). That followed a policy set in 2021 allowing regional cellphone providers to compete as MVNOs across Canada using networks built by large companies.

But Bibic urged Ottawa and the CRTC to ensure Canada’s four major telecom companies have incentives to invest and differenti­ate themselves from each other, which he said would lead to more customer value. He warned of “unintended consequenc­es” if regulation continues to ramp up.

“There comes a point where if government is too interventi­onist, all of us are going to have to scale back those investment­s, which is not good for consumers and businesses,” he said.

“If you’ve got to start cutting back on capital, what gets cut first? Does the GTA get cut first? Or does some northern community in Ontario get cut first? We know the answer to that.”

In an analyst note earlier this month, RBC analyst Drew McReynolds said that while the “regulatory temperatur­e is rising” in the telecom sector, “for the national operators the regulatory pendulum does not appear to have swung too far in favour of regional operators.”

Bibic also pushed back against a “prevailing but false narrative” surroundin­g the state of competitio­n in Canada’s telecom industry, as well as cellphone and internet prices.

A report released in February by Wall Communicat­ions Inc., which conducts an annual comparison of Canadian phone and internet prices to other jurisdicti­ons, found Canada still had among the highest prices internatio­nally for cellphone and broadband service in 2022.

But Bibic noted that despite rising inflation, wireless prices in Canada have declined eight per cent over the past two years and almost 25 per cent since January 2020.

 ?? JUSTIN TANG, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Mirko Bibic, president and CEO of BCE and Bell Canada, says there’s a shift “towards more micromanag­ement of Canada’s telecom industry.”
JUSTIN TANG, THE CANADIAN PRESS Mirko Bibic, president and CEO of BCE and Bell Canada, says there’s a shift “towards more micromanag­ement of Canada’s telecom industry.”

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