Picture of Viviane Reding
Reding: changes will enhance accessibility of multimedia services

Wireless market rules relaxed to promote growth

Restrictions lifted on use of radio spectrum

Written by Neon Kelly

The European Commission is opening up the wireless technology market by discarding out-dated rules limiting the areas of available radio spectrum.

Next-generation wireless technologies such as BlackBerrys and smartphones work best over low frequencies that, until now, were reserved for GSM mobile phones. According to a statement last week, the Commission will allow new services to co-exist alongside GSM.

The aim is to establish a more flexible, market-driven approach to spectrum management, says European Union telecoms commissioner Viviane Reding.

‘The changes will increase competition in the use of spectrum bands and enhance accessibility of Europeans to multimedia services,’ she said.

The scrapping of the 1987 GSM Directive is part of efforts to heighten interest in the spectrum auctions across Europe over the next three years.

The wireless internet services that will use the new spectrum are a huge growth area. Analyst Gartner published predictions last week that the mobile email market alone, which currently has fewer than 20 million business users worldwide, will surge to 350 million users by 2010.

Getting the regulatory environment right will be crucial to the growth of suppliers and the multimedia services that they provide. Such success is a priority for the European Commission in light of the 2010 objectives for boosting the region’s global economic competitiveness.

Wireless frequency auctions are also under way in the US, and competition issues are already arising.

Last month Google announced a possible bid of $4.6bn (£2.2bn), on the condition that the US Federal Communications Commission ensures the winning bidder acts as a wholesaler.

Google’s concern is that a single broadband carrier that is not obliged to sell access to others could hold a monopoly. The result could be competitors charged for access, and an end to net neutrality.

‘Google would be crazy to become a wireless carrier,’ said Jan Dawson, analyst at Ovum.

‘The potential bid is about Google creating its own channel for customers to access its services, just in case they are blocked by other carriers.’

The search firm is less likely to show an interest in the UK auctions because of regulator Ofcom’s different approach, says Stephen Hearnden, director of communications for technology trade group Intellect.

‘Ofcom parcels up the spectrum in many ways to maximise competition,’ he said.

reader comments

related articles

Radio spectrum for sale

Ofcom announces plans for radio spectrum sell off 18 Dec 2006

 

Digital radio - immaculate reception

There’s more than one way to listen to digital radio. Here’s how to tune in to radio reinvented 20 Mar 2007

Ofcom considering trade of unused spectrum

Regulator proposes deregulation to create market driven environment 13 Jul 2006

Review 2007: Telecoms and broadband

A look back at the stories making the headlines in telecommunications last year 20 Dec 2007

Interest grows in 3G services

Increased demand for mobile broadband from digital TV switchover 06 Dec 2007

EC focuses on high-speed broadband service regulation

European Commission adopts new recommendations on the retail and wholesale comms market 14 Nov 2007

related whitepapers

today's top stories

Body Shop rolls out PCI system

Retailer hopes to benefit from improved customer data analysis 07 Oct 2008

Where to offshore (and why not here?)

Tholons, the research firm founded by well-known offshoring guru Avinash Vashistha , has just published some new research in Global Services magazine... 07 Oct 2008

The future of Ethernet

Where is Ethernet going? We look at the future of the widely-used networking technology. 07 Oct 2008

The pIT stop Q&A: How can I measure the business success of IT applications?

Ou expert panel answers readers' real-life IT questions 07 Oct 2008

National Identity Fraud Prevention Week

Every Monday seems to mark the beginning of a new awareness drive and this week’s theme has particular importance to small businesses... 06 Oct 2008

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Jobs

Related jobs

Job of the week

Job alerts

Sign up here

Find your next job

Advertisement

White papers

Search white papers

Top categories

VPN, Extranet and Intranet Solutions

WAN/ LAN Solutions

Network Security

Interoperability-Connectivity

Grid/ Utility Computing

Latest poll

Would you apply for a job that was advertised on Facebook or a similar social networking site?

Would you apply for a job that was advertised on Facebook or a similar social networking site?

The government is using Facebook to recruit IT staff - would you apply to such an ad?

Previous poll results

Latest audio and video articles

Ethernet cableVideo

The future of Ethernet

Where is Ethernet going? We look at the future of the widely-used networking technology. 07 Oct 2008

Podcast imageAudio

Computing podcast - Next-generation broadband Britain; and we report from Gartner's IT security summit

In our latest podcast, we discuss the hurdles that a national fibre-optic network must overcome, and look at the issues discussed at the recent IT security conference 02 Oct 2008

Latest in-depth articles

Features

How to ensure progress in programming

Best practice advice from Forrester Research 02 Oct 2008

BT workersAnalysis

Wanted: a viable model for fibre

While other European countries are pressing ahead with fibre rollouts, progress in the UK is being held back as the debate over who will foot the bill drags on, writes Dave Bailey 02 Oct 2008

Advertisement

Primary Navigation