EU looks to cut roaming text rates by two-thirds
By Huw Jones, Reuters,
The price of sending a text message between EU states could be cut by two-thirds to 11 euro cents (6.5 pence), if EU telecoms commissioner Viviane Reding has her way.
Reding's long-awaited proposal is now circulating among all the other European Union commissioners before they formally adopt it later this month or in early October. The EU's 27 member states and the European Parliament must also approve the change.
Some 2.5 billion text messages are send every year by roaming customers in the EU and cost about 10 times more than domestic short messages (SMS).
Roamed texts represented 97 per cent pure revenue for operators, Reding said in July. A roamed text currently costs about 29 euro cents to send.
The proposal also extends by three years to 2013 caps which are already in place on roamed voice calls but will sharpen the rate of decline, the sources said, quoting from the draft text.
The voice roaming law was one of the most popular policies ever to come out of Brussels.
The European Regulators Group, made up of national telecoms watchdogs from each member state, said recently that due to falls in wholesale connection prices, the current caps on roamed voice calls are about eight euro cents per minute too high.
Reding also wants to introduce billing by the second from the 31st second of a call to avoid operators charging by the minute even if the call only last a few seconds, the sources said.
This may become a point of debate as several EU states have laws that require billing by the second from the first second.
Reding is also proposing a wholesale cap of one euro per megabyte on using a mobile phone or laptop to surf the web, download data or send emails, the sources added.
This compares with prices of about three to four euros today.
Market regulators are keen for Reding to help end the "bill shock" which travellers can suffer from huge bills after using their phone or laptop to transfer data.
A retail price cap on data roaming was not being ruled out in the final text as some in the EU executive are unconvinced that a wholesale cap would be adequate to drive down prices.
Related Tags
advertisement
Latest Mobile & Telecoms Features
Netbooks vs. Smartphones: Making business mobile
What we traditionally think of as a smartphone is changing, as data is overtaking voice in terms of use. However, netbooks are beginning to become more and more pocketable – but which is better for someone who wants an office on the move?
- Is TalkTalk vulnerable to takeover?
- Top 10 mobiles for work and play
- Q&A: HP Labs’ Prith Banerjee
- Consumer tech invading business
- Q&A: Mike Lazaridis and Jim Balsillie, co-chief executives at RIM
- The present and future of IT security
- Tera Scale Lab: Where hardware meets software
- Q&A: Motorola's enterprise VP John Coon
- Q&A: Orange's devices chief Francois Mahieu
Latest Mobile & Telecoms Reviews
HTC Touch HD
Rating: ![]()
advertisement
Latest News Videos in Mobile & Telecoms
Video: HTC Touch Pro review
Can HTC's Touch Pro go one better than the Touch Diamond? Check out our video review to find out.
White papers
Want more background on today's hottest IT trends?
Visit IT PRO's white paper library for more on virtualisation, encryption and other topics.
Register for IT PRO
You'll get exclusive member benefits including free white papers, downloads, Webinars and weekly newsletters full of the latest IT PRO news, reviews, insight and expertise.



Social Bookmark this article: What is this?