Index  ›  tech  ›  BBC
tech · BBC ↗

EU says telecoms market 'too fragmented'

BBC Published May 25, 2010 Reviewed Jun 30, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
Mobile phone call charges in the EU vary from 0.04 euro per minute in Latvia to 0.24 euro per minute in Malta.
0.04 euro per minute · mobile phone call charges0.24 euro per minute · mobile phone call charges
European Commission, Commission report
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
In January, the average EU take‑up of fixed broadband per capita was 24.8%, corresponding to more than 123 million lines.
24.8 percent · fixed broadband take‑up per capitamore than 123 million lines · fixed broadband lines
European Commission, Commission
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
EU telecoms experienced zero growth in 2009, while the EU economy declined by 4.2%.
0 percent · EU telecoms growth4.2 percent · EU economy decline
European Commission, Commission
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Denmark and the Netherlands have nearly 40% of their populations with broadband internet access.
about 40 percent · broadband internet access
European Commission, Commission
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
In January, EU mobile broadband take‑up reached 5.2% of the population, with Finland, Portugal and Austria each above 15% penetration.
5.2 percent · EU mobile broadband take‑upmore than 15 percent · penetration rates
European Commission, Commission
View source ↗

Businesses and consumers across the EU are plagued by high prices because of inconsistent application of EU telecoms rules, the European Commission says.

Mobile phone call charges range from 0.04 euro per minute in Latvia to 0.24 in Malta, a Commission report says.

Big price differences are hampering efforts to create a single market in EU telecoms.

There was zero growth in EU telecoms in 2009, while the overall EU economy saw a 4.2% decline.

The EU's Digital Agenda Commissioner Neelie Kroes said "rapid growth of mobile broadband and more affordable internet access are good news for consumers in these tough economic times".

"Yet the limited progress towards a true single market is disappointing. Member states need to do more to ensure telecoms rules are properly implemented."

The Commission said some national regulators were controlling wholesale broadband markets, while in other countries regulation was limited to the old copper-based networks.

In January average EU take-up of fixed broadband per capita stood at 24.8% - more than 123 million lines.

Denmark and the Netherlands are world leaders in fixed-line broadband, with nearly 40% of the population enjoying broadband internet access, the Commission says.

EU mobile broadband take-up has almost doubled in the past year.

In January it was reaching 5.2% of the EU population, and the penetration rates for Finland, Portugal and Austria were above 15%.

This article was originally published by BBC ↗. citations.press indexes the source-backed facts above and links to the original. Something wrong? Corrections policy · Report an error