EU hopes for deal on mobile phone roaming rates by June

19 Mar, 2007

EU telecoms ministers on March 15 reached broad agreement on trimming the high cost of using mobile phones abroad, raising hopes for a "roaming fees" deal to be sealed by the end of June.
After an informal meeting on the sidelines of the world's biggest high-tech fair, the CeBIT, European Information and Media Commissioner Viviane Reding said the bloc would likely sign off on regulations in the first half of the year capping roaming charges at 50 euro cents (66 dollar cents) per minute.
"In order to arrive there it will be very intense work," she said. Reding did not mention a possible maximum charge for calls received when cell phone users are travelling outside their home country but her spokesman provided the figure of 25 euro cents per minute.
Both prices given would be before the value-added tax levied by member states.
Earlier Economy Minister Michael Glos of Germany, which holds the six-month rotating presidency of the EU, said, "the will to reach an accord on roaming was demonstrated" at the meeting. "We cannot count on the market to regulate it - that is over," he said. "But in the process of dealing with the matter, competition among the operators and the incentives for innovation must not be endangered."
The ministers voiced their support for structuring the rules as simply as possible and keeping potential bureaucratic hurdles to a minimum. Thursday's gathering was the last before a formal ministers' meeting in Brussels June 6 and 7.
The European Parliament will vote in May on the issue, amid serious strain between telecommunications firms and the European Commission. The Commission, stating a goal of driving down roaming charges by 70 percent, put forward proposals in July for reducing the rates.
A final area that still requires a compromise is the cost of calls made locally with a foreign cell phone, for example if a British tourist calls a taxi in France.

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