Ofcom
The EU has endorsed Ofcom's decision to tailor regulation to local competitive conditions
R E L A T E D   C O N T E N T

Free email newsletters




ADVERTISEMENT

EU relaxes rules on UK broadband regulation

Regions deemed to have enough competition will not be regulated

Matt Chapman, vnunet.com 15 Feb 2008
ADVERTISEMENT

The European Union has endorsed Ofcom proposals to relax the regulation of wholesale broadband access in the UK.

Viviane Reding, EU Commissioner for Information Society and Media, confirmed that plans to regulate the sector are consistent with rules set out in the EU framework.

The EU found that the decision to tailor regulation to local competitive conditions through the identification of sub-national markets is justified.

The ruling follows a consultation document issued by Ofcom in November 2007 which set out proposals for effective regulation.

"In that document Ofcom recognised that competition in the supply of wholesale broadband access services has matured at different rates across the UK and has identified four distinct sub-national markets," said a statement from Ofcom.

"Ofcom proposes to tailor regulation in these sub-national markets according to the level of competition in each."

The decision allows Ofcom to deregulate an area of the UK that covers 65 per cent of UK premises, allowing the standards body to regulate only where it is necessary.

Matthew Howett, an analyst at Ovum, said that he "sympathised" with Reding's view that there may be inherent difficulties with sub-national markets.

"Particularly in reconciling the apparent conflict of making the market review process more effective by allowing regulators to concentrate on areas where structural competition problems still exist and streamlining it," he said.

Howett believes that adding more layers could increase the red tape that the EU is trying to reduce.

"This will be particularly acute for regulators which lack the resource and expertise that Ofcom has," he said.

"In addition, for those areas where regulation is removed, careful monitoring will be needed to see if competition develops as expected."

However, Howett said that the benefits of better-targeted regulation currently outweigh any concerns.

See also:

OfcomBectu president appalled at Ofcom 'treachery'  14 Feb 2008
BroadbandMore needs to be done to ease migration  13 Feb 2008
BitTorrentCable firm explains traffic management policy in FCC filing  14 Feb 2008
Current 700MHz bids reach $18.9bn  12 Feb 2008
Maidstone marked as pilot site  11 Feb 2008
Technology to improve indoor 3G coverage  11 Feb 2008

All Telecoms
Tags: Communications, Government

Like this story? Spread the news by clicking below:

Post this to Delicious del.icio.us    Post this to Digg Digg this    Post this to reddit reddit!

Permalink for this story
R E A D E R   C O M M E N T S

M A R K E T P L A C E
Sponsored links
F E A T U R E D   J O B S
Maidstone, United Kingdom | Kent Police
  Forensic Computer Analyst - Police Headquarters, Maidstone, £27,891 - £38,476 Permanent Contract Digital devices and information communication technology are present in almost every investigation the police service undertakes. Kent Police Digital Forensics Unit is ... more >
London, United Kingdom | London School of Economics
  IT Services -Systems Specialist  (Business Continuity), Salary: £38,212 - £44,264 p.a. 2 years fixed-term LSE is a cosmopolitan community in the centre of London focusing on the study of the social sciences. IT Services ... more >
United Kingdom | MI5 Security Service
Forensic Analysts Working for MI5 you will use your expertise to protect the UK from terrorism, espionage and other threats to national security. You'll be joining a team that provides essential technical analysis and capability ... more >
TWICKENHAM, United Kingdom | Rugby Football Union
RUGBYFIRST PROJECT MANAGER, TWICKENHAM, c. £40,000 per annum   12 month fixed term RugbyFirst, the most modern administration system in British sport, is a game-wide internet-based tool to help run rugby at all levels, with the ... more >
More job opportunities