In previous annual reviews, the Reference Offer draft Order was only consulted with Batelco. However, as the RO affects the whole industry and in order to promote greater transparency, TRA issued the draft Order for public consultation in response to which several operators submitted their comments. The comments received were carefully considered by TRA when reaching its final position.
Commenting on this Order, TRA's General Director, Mr Mohamed Bubashait, said: "A sensible wholesale offer to OLOs is a key regulatory instrument supporting competition and choice in the telecommunications sector. The charges set in this Order are evidence-based, fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory, and allow Batelco to earn a fair and reasonable return on its investment."
The key highlights of the new charges are:
• Bitstream and Wholesale DSL charges are decreasing by between -2% and -26% compared to current charges. This decrease will support the provision of cheaper and faster broadband offers in the retail market.
• Interconnection links charges are decreasing by between -30% and -50% compared to current charges.
• Interconnection services charges are stable.
• Duct access charges are kept unchanged. TRA also introduces a maximum price that Batelco can charge to OLOs for the field study stage required prior to cabling.
• Domestic eased lines charges are decreasing by up to -46%. This will support the offering of more competitive prices to business users and help Bahrain as a business hub.
• Charges for international leased half circuits to GCC Countries are decreasing by between -28% and -68%. For Southeast/East Asia, Europe and the USA, the charges are decreasing by between -41% and -45%. This will support the competitiveness of Bahrain.
Commenting on these highlights, Mr Mohamed Bubashait further said: "The work TRA does at the wholesale level is critical as it underpins competition between operators which in turn provides benefits to consumers in terms of lower prices and better services. The reductions in key wholesale services will ultimately translate into better propositions at the retail level for retail customers and businesses."
Ofcom looks to boost fast data services - stockmarketwire.com
The Business Connectivity Market Review, published today, looks at the £2bn wholesale market for ‘leased lines’ used by businesses and by mobile and broadband operators to transfer data on their networks. Leased lines also provide vital high-speed links between schools, universities, libraries and other public bodies.
The review proposes to maintain and extend some existing regulation on BT, the major provider of wholesale services in this market. But Ofcom also proposes lighter regulation in the London area, where BT faces greater competition from other providers.
London benefits from a substantial, competitive fibre infrastructure, in a wider geographic area than previously found. This has allowed Ofcom to propose significantly extending the deregulated area for legacy high-speed networks westwards towards Heathrow.
The combined measures are designed to sustain competition and ensure the UK has a backbone of high speed business networks capable of supporting not only companies, but also consumer services that ultimately rely on these networks, such as superfast broadband and mobile video streaming.
For products with speeds up to and including 1Gbit/s, Ofcom is proposing broadly to maintain existing regulation, including charge controls and a requirement on BT to provide access on a strictly non-discriminatory basis.
Outside of London, Ofcom is proposing to regulate very high-bandwidth, wholesale leased line services above 1Gbit/s. BT is proposed to have ‘significant market power’ in this relatively new market, in all parts of the UK except London and Hull.1
Meeting explosive growth in demand
These are among several measures designed to ensure the UK’s fibre networks keep pace with explosive growth2 in bandwidth-hungry applications used by businesses and consumers, such as video streaming, smartphone applications and ‘cloud computing’.
Ofcom’s other proposals include:
a less strict form of price regulation on BT’s wholesale Ethernet* prices for services up to 1Gbit/s in London, where there is the prospect of greater competition; deregulating the market for longer distance legacy leased lines; and requiring BT to provide its regulated Ethernet services on the same basis to all retail providers.
A changing market
Ofcom has identified changes in the market for leased lines3 since the last review was completed in 2008. Demand for legacy leased lines based on older technology has declined significantly, with more providers switching to faster, cheaper Ethernet lines.
While speeds are increasing, the cost of network equipment is falling, particularly for lines using Ethernet and ‘wave division multiplex’ (WDM), a new technology that enables more information to travel over a single strand of optical fibre.
Next steps
Ofcom’s consultation seeks to encourage competition in the business connectivity market, and identify how best to sustain critical fibre networks between businesses – which also support a growing number of consumer services.
Ofcom expects to publish a statement on its conclusions early next year. Ofcom will outline the prices it proposes BT can charge its customers for these products in the coming weeks.
Story provided by StockMarketWire.com
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