Cape Times

Telkom to reduce prices for IP Connect products

- DINEO FAKU dineo.faku@inl.co.za

TELKOM, the partially state-owned company, said that it would reduce prices for its IP Connect products following an agreement with the Competitio­n Commission of South Africa.

Telkom said yesterday that Openserve, the new product suite by its wholesale division, would introduce transparen­cy and remove any perceived competitio­n problems associated with wholesale broadband connectivi­ty.

Chief executive Sipho Maseko said Openserve had been considerin­g changing the way it provided wholesale broadband over its copper and fibre infrastruc­ture for some time.

Maseko said the group agreed that the structure and initial pricing of this new offering from Openserve would reduce wholesale charges to Internet Service Providers (ISPs) for fibre broadband wholesale customers paving the way for the removal of the pricing concerns raised in respect of IP Connect.

“The new Openserve offering, which is structured as an aggregated end-to-end solution, will allow ISPs to manage their costs and compare the Openserve fixed broadband prices with the prices of other wholesale broadband providers more easily, thus enhancing competitio­n in the fixed broadband connectivi­ty market,” he said.

Telkom said there was no need for the commission to recommend that Telkom lower its prices.

Maseko said the group would improve transparen­cy of pricing and notify its customers of the in-bundle effective rate per megabyte in its purchase confirmati­on messages to subscriber­s.

He said Telkom was also committed to narrowing the digital divide by offering zero-rated access to essential government services and educationa­l institutio­ns, including the primary URLs of more than 60 universiti­es as well as further education and training institutio­ns.

This month MTN and Vodacom announced that they would slash data prices from next month.

Meanwhile, Telkom has said that it had suspended all Section 189 consultati­ons with employees due to the 21-day lockdown from midnight tomorrow.

“Following the president’s announceme­nt of a national lockdown starting at midnight tonight for 21 days, we have decided to suspend consultati­ons until further notice.”

It said Telkom and Yellow Pages were currently at different stages of the section 189 consultati­on process with exit dates agreed with those who had volunteere­d to take voluntary severance packages (VSP).

The group said it had embarked on a consultati­on process with organised labour in January to cut 3 000 jobs in a bid to streamline operations amid falling earnings and a tough economic environmen­t.

Last week it said it had spent R1.5 billion on its restructur­ing – in which some employees had opted for VSP and voluntary early retirement packages as an alternativ­e to retrenchme­nt – would hit its earnings in the 2020 financial year.

“Those who have opted for VSP will exit the organisati­on on the agreed dates and we thank them for their commitment to effective hand-overs during this challengin­g period.

“The health and safety of our employees are of the utmost priority,” Telkom said yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa