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Commissioner calls for end to roaming charges in EU

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Published 30 May 2013, updated 02 September 2013

Digital Agenda Commissioner Neelie Kroes on Thursday (30 May) called for an end to mobile roaming charges before the next European elections, and said mobile network operators should no longer be able to block telecommunications services such as Skype.

Speaking to the European Parliament, Kroes said she wanted Europeans to be able to see what the EU is doing for them ahead of elections to be held on 22-25 May 2014.

“Will you join me in building something special between now and the European elections," she asked the MEPs. “I want us to show citizens that the EU is relevant to their lives. I want you to be able to go back to your constituents and say that you were able to end mobile roaming costs.”

Kroes said the EU could deliver a ”full, final” legislative package to end roaming charges “around Easter 2014”.

Kroes’ proposal would go well beyond previous Commission efforts to cap roaming charges on cross-border calls and messaging.

Building a bridge with citizens

Kroes, who is not running for another term at the Commission, said she wanted to give MEPs the “full share of credit” for “building a bridge” to EU voters. She said the proposal could reach young people – “the generation that cares most about being connected, but who votes the least”.

“If we do this right, then digital connections can bring political connections. Digital dividends can bring social ones. … Whether they need it for travel, for trade, or for transactions – our people need this reform,” Kroes said.

The commissioner's spokesman, Ryan Heath, said telecom operators did not oppose the move because it would spur demand. Telecommunication executives had told Kroes that they had been wrong to oppose caps on roaming charges, he said.

“That’s a case of a real win-win. It’s not a total shock for the companies,” he said.

Telecom companies may not be so easy to convince by the move to guarantee network neutrality, which would mean ending restrictions on internet communications services.

The neutrality principle implies that no provider can prioritise traffic on the network for economic reasons. A recent report showed that at least 20%, and potentially up to half of EU mobile broadband users, have contracts that allow their internet service provider (ISP) to restrict communications services or peer-to-peer file sharing. Some 20% of fixed operators also enforce service restrictions that limit Internet speed.

Companies blocking services like Skype "will really have to face the competition," Heath said. "They will no longer be able to block Skype because its suits them. That’s going to come at a cost for them, but it’s going to help more companies than it hurts.”

Next steps: 
  • 22-25 May 2014: European elections
Georgi Gotev

COMMENTS

  • Yay! But will this stop Telecom Italia from whingeing that they can't improve speed until the other providers share the cost of infrastructure improvements? Doubt it. EU should NOT have drastically reduced 2014-2020 subsidy for high speed infrastructure. Those of us in peripheral areas haven't got a chance...

    By :
    Mary Ann DeVlieg
    - Posted on :
    30/05/2013
  • I hope this puts an end to the rip-off (largely moderated by EU legislation on roaming clls within the EU a few years ago). I went to Switzerland and France with a UK phone contract and returned on one occasion with an £80+ month's phone bill - simply because each time I crossed a frontier back and forth I got calls welcoming me to the new networks available in each country. Incoming calls including advert/pester calls were charged. I made two calls (local) and three to the UK)naturally the Phone companies treated all these as made from the UK on full tariff! All this exploitation is now limited to a maximum charge per call - incoming too - but it still adds up... Great news if the Telecom folk don't stop it. It could not be better news.

    By :
    Roberto
    - Posted on :
    30/05/2013
  • What an EXCELLENT idea. Living in Luxembourg roaming is particularly anoying and stupid!

    By :
    Serge-Arno Klumper
    - Posted on :
    30/05/2013
  • What an excellent idea. Let's hope the MEPs follow her lead and put an end the telcos's tax.

    By :
    Ray
    - Posted on :
    30/05/2013
  • is this only for the election votes? how much it benefits normal citizens and how much it benefits peoples that are abusing of this recession , and i guess the cost of this movement it will added to working class citizens that are not profiting of it just like national airlines PAID BY THE WORKING CLASSAND USED BY POLITICS AND BUSINESS PEOPLE the majority of europeans dont want europe any more this changes it will not stop the end of europe but still some people dont want to hunderstand

    By :
    FABIO
    - Posted on :
    30/05/2013
  • Roaming costs? What is that? I've been using a Roaming sim card for two years now! And I use it in the whole world! I use it in the whole world and no problems! Now I only have two sim cards! One for at home and one for traveling!!

    By :
    michael meyer
    - Posted on :
    30/05/2013
  • Ms Kroes' speech holds a flaw typical of many politicians. Citizens want(wish) legislation improvements by MP to be tabled because they are beneficial to the population and not for the sake of acquiring votes! Good governing is the best way to raise consensus.

    By :
    Elio PENNISI
    - Posted on :
    30/05/2013
  • Great news! Next step - mandate national roaming at the retail level. Naturally the operators will resist this too - urging politicians to accept that it will "chill investment" (the current argument that has replaced: "we can't do it because it's not technically possible" followed by: "it will be too expensive to implement"). There is no alternative to national roaming that could expand coverage and fill "not spots" so quickly or cost so relatively little.

    By :
    David G
    - Posted on :
    30/05/2013
  • very good news. We are actually facing plenty of non sense. The more communications are available, the more we see brakes.
    Roaming cost is the greatest non sense against travelling facilities.
    No price competition for telephony/internet within Europe.
    Plenty of ridiculs constraints. Often living in The Netherlands close to Belgium (2km) i am not authorized to see some viseos stored on the Belgian Television blog (RTBF); Just crazy.
    Another example : The telephone Cy Belgacom is unable to give me the foreign phone numbers associated with my bill. I just must trust them !!!! (i tried unsuccessfully to get them).
    Europe must be one area that simplify the life of their people and if costs can be reduced too (am convinced) it another good reason to go FAST please.
    The difference between USA and Europe is that USA reacts and implements immediately in case they decide something. In Europe it takes years and years.

    By :
    Guy LESIRE
    - Posted on :
    31/05/2013
  • Finally...!

    However, I think having to pay a bit more for calls while being abroad is not the most important issue. The true scandal is that it these costs are added to the initial contract. For example, if I have a monthly 20€ call credit, the costs of calling elsewhere in Europe would not be subtracted from my credit but will be most of the time ADDED to it, ending the month with a 25€, 30€, or more, bill.

    Why so ??

    By :
    korkenschlumpfer
    - Posted on :
    31/05/2013
  • Good idea!
    If we want a united European state, we should abolish all kinds of internal borders, information borders as well.

    The blocking of Skype and p2p file sharing should be outlawed! Providers have no moral right to do such things.

    By :
    Otto
    - Posted on :
    02/06/2013
  • Finally Digital Agenda Commissioner Neelie Kroes does something about a tweet I made a year and a half ago:

    "@DigitalAgendaEU How can one 'roam' when IN a Digital Single Market #OcammsRazor It is not #DSM if one 'roams' within it. cc @NeelieKroesEU"
    https://twitter.com/awbMaven/status/174135688734851074

    By :
    awbmaven
    - Posted on :
    17/06/2013
  • But service providers are finding backdoor ways to circumvent these regulations and the caps. For example vodafone have introduced the GBP 3.00 charge per day to take your UK package and inclusive data and minutes with you to Europe when travelling. So no roaming charges but the charges made are actually very high - GBP 90 for a monthly holiday in Europe - compare this to the package they used to offer before of GBP 10 for 25 Mb data a day for 30 days - a good value package - was the reason for me to join vodafone - it did not last long,

    The EC should go after providers that try and find ways round the data roaming caps and EU regulations on pricing

    By :
    simon
    - Posted on :
    22/06/2013
  • I fully agree with OTTO !(02/06/2013)

    A very Pro European Attitude !
    Thank's man ! ;-)

    By :
    an european
    - Posted on :
    18/07/2013
  • An European,

    I need to thank you too.
    Sometimes I just don't want to read comments section on this site, because of the usual Nazi/europhobes rants.
    Your comments are often the only ones worth reading here.

    By :
    Otto
    - Posted on :
    19/07/2013
Neelie Kroes
Background: 

In June 2007, the European Commission introduced a regulation placing caps on prices of cross-border mobile calls in Europe, the so-called 'roaming regulation'.

The EU executive's intervention was limited to roaming because domestic calls remain a competence of national regulators. The first roaming regulation also excluded text messaging and data. A second regulation entered into force in 2009, introducing further steps to gradually lower caps for voice roaming, together with guarantees against "bill shocks" for data roaming.

In July 2011 the Commission proposed a third roaming regulation and announced plans to structurally reform the European market for roaming phone calls slashing wholesale prices and opening access to the market to new service providers.

The measures were supposed to eliminate differences for cross-border phone calls, saying that price caps will be no longer necessary as from 2016.

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