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IP/09/620 Strasbourg, 22 April 2009 Cost of roaming texts, calls and data services to plummet from 1 JulyA text message sent from abroad in the EU will cost no more than €0.11 as of 1 July, instead of €0.28 today. The times where consumers had to expect "bill shocks" for downloading a picture or a movie with a mobile phone while roaming in the EU are over. The European Parliament, in its plenary session in Strasbourg, today voted by a large majority in favour of new EU rules on SMS and data roaming, proposed by the European Commission in September 2008 (IP/08/1386). The Parliament also voted for further cuts in the price of mobile phone calls while roaming in another EU country. The present cap for a mobile phone call made abroad will progressively drop from €0.46 to €0.35 per minute by July 2011, and from €0.22 today to €0.11 for mobile calls received while roaming abroad. Mobile operators will also be required to bill roaming calls by the second from the 31st second at the latest, which will end the current practice under which consumers are overcharged by up to 24%. As the Council of EU Telecoms Ministers has already signalled its agreement with the new roaming rules, today's vote paves the way for an entry into force of the new rules just in time for the summer holidays. European consumers are expected to save up to 60% on their bill for using a mobile phone abroad in the EU."I welcome the strong support the European Parliament has today given the Commission's proposal for creating a single telecoms markets for all Europeans, whether they are crossing a border as tourists or as business travellers," said José Manuel Barroso, President of the European Commission. "After this vote, Europe is now clearly the most attractive continent in the world for mobile phone users. I expect this to translate very swiftly into even stronger growth for mobile data services in the EU." "Today's vote marks the definite end of the roaming rip off in Europe," said EU Telecoms Commissioner Viviane Reding. "Thanks to the strong support of the European Parliament and the Council, the new roaming rules were agreed in the record time of just 7 months. Just in time for the summer holidays, European citizens will now be able to see the single market without borders on their phone bills." "In times of economic downturn, strengthening the purchasing power of consumers is a strong instrument for a speedy recovery," said Consumer Commissioner Meglena Kuneva. "This is why today's vote will empower consumers and further stimulate the take up of mobile telephony in Europe." The new EU roaming rules endorsed by the Parliament today will:
Following today's Parliament vote, the new EU Roaming Regulation will become directly applicable law throughout all 27 EU Member States on 1 July 2009. The new roaming rules, which add to a first EU regulation on voice roaming adopted in 2007 (IP/07/870), will apply until summer 2012. The European Parliament has asked the Commission to report on the functioning of the new rules again by summer 2010. The Commission could then propose further rules, if required, by the end of June 2011. "The development of the roaming market will be kept under close EU scrutiny over the next three years", said Commissioner Reding. "I very much hope that the mobile industry will understand this message. The ball is now in their court if they want to show that there can be healthy competition in the roaming market. The best proof of this would be if attractive voice and data roaming packages appear on the market very soon.” Background: Since the present European Commission took office, the use of mobile telephony in the EU grew from 84.6% to 119% of the population (IP/09/473). The EU's telecoms market counts 500 million potential users of fixed and mobile telephony, Internet broadband and mobile data services. To solve structural problems of competition and regulatory consistency within this market and to stimulate new investment, the European Parliament, in its May plenary session, is expected to vote on a major reform of the EU's telecoms rules initiated by the Commission in November 2007 (IP/07/1677, MEMO/07/458, IP/08/1661). The new rules include the establishment of a European Telecoms Regulator called "BEREC" (Body of European Regulators for Electronic Communications) by January 2010. The EU Roaming Website offers an overview of current roaming tariffs per country in the EU: http://ec.europa.eu/information_society/activities/roaming/index_en.htm Annex: The new EU Roaming Rules in detail 1) SMS roaming a) The situation today Retail average SMS prices [ Figures and graphics available in PDF and WORD PROCESSED ] b) The new EU rules on SMS roaming: Maximum retail price allowed per SMS sent while roaming abroad in the EU (excluding VAT)
2) Data roaming a) The situation today Average wholesale price per data MB [ Figures and graphics available in PDF and WORD PROCESSED ] Average off-net retail price per MB [ Figures and graphics available in PDF and WORD PROCESSED ] b) The new EU rules on data roaming (2009) Wholesale cap per megabyte of data transmitted while roaming abroad,
3) Voice roaming a) The situation before the first EU roaming rules Average price roaming voice calls for calls made (April – September 2007) [ Figures and graphics available in PDF and WORD PROCESSED ] Average price roaming voice calls for calls received (April – September 2007) [ Figures and graphics available in PDF and WORD PROCESSED ] b) The situation under the EU roaming rules 2007 Retail cap for mobile roaming charges ("Eurotariff"),
c) The new EU roaming rules on voice roaming (2009) Retail cap for mobile roaming charges ("Eurotariff"),
4) The need for the principle of per second billing
Surcharge as a result of billed minutes for calls made and received for all consumers [ Figures and graphics available in PDF and WORD PROCESSED ] |
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