Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Competition Bureau calls for more regulation to cut wireless roaming rates

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Sep, 2014 02:19 PM

    GATINEAU, Que. - Introducing a new national wireless carrier in Canada would result in lower consumer prices, but regulators need to do more than simply cap wholesale roaming rates to make that happen, the competition watchdog has told the country's telecom regulator.

    The Competition Bureau called for new wireless regulations as the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission launched into yet another delicate juggling act aimed at ensuring that both consumers and industry players benefit from a healthy wireless marketplace.

    In a second of three major hearings being held this fall, the CRTC began public discussions Monday over the health of what is considered as the backbone of Canada's retail mobile services sector — the wholesale wireless market.

    The bureau told the regulator it needs to act to prevent the big three wireless carriers from stifling any new competition.

    "An additional nationwide carrier would increase choice, expand mobile wireless penetration in Canada . . and drive down the incumbents' average retail prices by about two per cent," bureau senior economist Patrick Hughes told the hearings.

    The CRTC is examining whether more regulation is needed to taper or cap the wholesale rates cellphone carriers charge other wireless companies to allow their customers to roam outside of their home networks.

    And while the commission is not examining the roaming rates consumers pay, Hughes told the hearings that wholesale and retail markets are inherently linked.

    As the hearings got underway, at least one think tank questioned whether the CRTC should do anything at all to affect the wholesale roaming market.

    Despite the impression of some Canadians that they pay among the highest cellphone rates, consumers in many other countries pay more, said the Montreal Economic Institute.

    "Prices in Canada are lower than in the United States, Japan, and Australia," the institute said in a statement.

    Still, the Competition Bureau told the CRTC there is evidence that the profit margins of the major wireless carriers are higher than they should be.

    The Harper government has repeatedly tried — so far unsuccessfully — to entice a fourth national player to set up a wireless service in Canada to compete against Bell, Rogers and Telus.

    However, Quebecor Inc. (TSX:QBR.B) has suggested the wholesale roaming rates it pays to piggy back on a major carrier's cellphone towers may prevent it from expanding its mobile business.

    Other smaller carriers have also said roaming rates are a major factor affecting their ability to compete.

    But Rogers Communications Inc. (TSX:RCI.B), BCE Inc. (TSX:BCE) and Telus Corp. (TSX:T) maintain that further regulation would hinder their ability to invest in improvements to their own wireless networks.

    Ottawa has already passed legislation capping the rates carriers can charge on a wholesale basis at no more than what they charge their customers at the retail level, pending the outcome of this week's hearings.

    Montreal-based Cogeco Cable Inc. (TSX:CCA), which is hoping to offer wireless services without building its own cell tower network, asked the CRTC to adopt new rules to allow for the creation of what are known as mobile virtual networks (MVNOs), which would effectively give smaller carriers access to large players’ spectrum and cell towers.

    Without regulations, the big players, known as mobile network operators or MNOs, will continue to muscle smaller competitors out of existence, said Nathalie Dorval, Cogeco's vice-president of regulatory affairs.

    "Large MNOs can — and do — exercise market power in the wholesale wireless market . . . which, when combined, create formidable barriers to entry by new entrants (into the retail market)," she told the hearing.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Meagre pay, tough conditions: Health-care workers needed for Ebola response

    Meagre pay, tough conditions: Health-care workers needed for Ebola response
    TORONTO - The pay is a pittance, the conditions are gruelling, and the personal risks are all too real. The need for international health-care workers to help in the response...

    Meagre pay, tough conditions: Health-care workers needed for Ebola response

    Victoria conference teaches First Nations how to map territories on Google Earth

    Victoria conference teaches First Nations how to map territories on Google Earth
    VICTORIA - Google Earth may soon extend it global gaze to some of the most remote First Nations territories in Canada....

    Victoria conference teaches First Nations how to map territories on Google Earth

    Head of B.C. Teachers' Union Jim Iker Calls For Government To Enter Mediation

    Head of B.C. Teachers' Union Jim Iker Calls For Government To Enter Mediation
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. - The head of the BC Teachers' Federation is urging government to enter mediation with teachers in order to end an ongoing strike before the school year starts next week.

    Head of B.C. Teachers' Union Jim Iker Calls For Government To Enter Mediation

    Scientists study seismic line restoration in Alberta foothills to save Caribou

    Scientists study seismic line restoration in Alberta foothills to save Caribou
    HINTON, Alta. - Scientists studying the ravaged caribou habitat of Alberta's northwestern foothills say they have found so much disturbance from decades of industrial use that restoration will have to be selective.

    Scientists study seismic line restoration in Alberta foothills to save Caribou

    Vancouver Man completes charity swim from New Brunswick to P.E.I. and back

    Vancouver Man completes charity swim from New Brunswick to P.E.I. and back
    A Vancouver man said he was looking forward to a bath and some black forest cake after completing a swim from New Brunswick to Prince Edward Island and back.

    Vancouver Man completes charity swim from New Brunswick to P.E.I. and back

    The universe in his hands: Vamcouver Artist hopes to launch galactic consciousness

    The universe in his hands: Vamcouver Artist hopes to launch galactic consciousness
    VANCOUVER - When a storm of magazines and major dailies published an astronaut's photograph of the Earth cresting above the moon in January 1969, the image spurred a new era of global consciousness.

    The universe in his hands: Vamcouver Artist hopes to launch galactic consciousness