The Scotsman

Watchdog hands BT a record £42m fine

● Regulator says firm had failed to pay rivals after late installati­ons

- By JANE BRADLEY Consumer Affairs Correspond­ent

BT has been fined a record £42 million for a “serious breach” of its rules for failing to pay full compensati­on to rival firms for late connection­s to its infrastruc­ture.

The investigat­ion found that BT misused the terms of its contracts to reduce compensati­on payments owed to other telecoms providers for failing to deliver “Ethernet” services on time.

The regulation­s breached by the firm, which owns the network of internet cables through its Openreach arm, address the company’s “significan­t market power” and are designed to ensure that BT does not have an unfair competitiv­e advantage over its peers.

Dan Howdle, consumer telecoms analyst at broadband advice site Cable.co.uk, said: “Today’s ruling offers insight

0 BT provides the network that its rivals use – and has been fined over delays in connecting them to its infrastruc­ture into just some of the factors contributi­ng to Ofcom’s decisionto­splitbtand­openreach into two separate entities.

“Clearly, being the sole owner of shared infrastruc­ture has given rise to precisely the sort of conflict of interest of which BT has long been accused. Customers must never be allowed to become collateral damage in the battle to gain the upper hand in the market.”

Last year, Ofcom fell short of recommendi­ng a full break up of BT and Openreach, but said BT and Openreach should be split into two entirely independen­t companies. It came to an agreement with the firm over how this should be implemente­d earlier this month.

Ofcom opened the investigat­ion into the breach, which took place between January 2013 and December 2014, shortly after Vodafone brought allegation­s to Ofcom that BT had misused its contractua­l terms through the late delivery of Ethernet services without Vodafone’s consent, and by failing to compensate the company for these delays. In addition to the fine, it will also have to compensate all the telecoms providers who faced financial loss because of its conduct within 12 months.

Gauchorasm­ussen,ofcom’s investigat­ions director, said: “These high-speed lines are a vital part of this country’s digital backbone.

“We found BT broke our rules by failing to pay other telecoms companies proper compensati­on when these services were not provided on time. The size of our fine reflects how important these rules are to protect competitio­n and, ultimately, consumers and businesses. Our message is clear – we will not tolerate this sort of behaviour.”

Openreach chief executive Clive Selley said: “We apologise wholeheart­edly for the mistakes Openreach made in the past when processing orders for a number of highspeed business connection­s.

“This shouldn’t have happened and we fully accept Ofcom’s findings.”

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