Broadband in Europe


Book Description

The Brussels Round Table, a forum of leading EU telecommunications operators and equipment manufacturers, commissioned these articles. They examine the deployment of broadband in European countries and make policy recommendations related to telecommunications regulation. Specific topics include pricing flexibility, competition, growth potential, likely future dynamics, competition, investment opportunities, eliminating excess regulation, facilitating longer-term points of view, and suggestions for transparent and competition-neutral subsidies.




Broadband Access in the EU


Book Description

Broadband adoption and its applications have been found to affect economic growth, innovativeness, political representation and individual welfare. As such, network infrastructures are now central in the political agenda with modern economies largely dependent on the vast spillover effects of information services. The European Commission has set out its targets to improve the Union's infrastructure by 2020 and provide high quality services to all citizens. This effort entails a front-loaded high-risk investment - both in terms of technology uncertainty and the rate of adoption - making it unlikely to materialize without significant subsidies. In this paper we attempt to estimate the net benefits of the implementation of the Broadband Digital Agenda. Using a structural model we first estimate the broadband infrastructure returns for the period 2005-2011, differentiating the impact of broadband by levels of adoption and speed while taking into account the effects of reverse causality and extensive heterogeneity. We further extrapolate the individualized returns by country using different scenarios of implementation. In doing so, we utilize the most detailed sample on the total infrastructure cost requirements depending on demography, technology choice and network reuse. Effectively we monetize the conceptual policy goals, acknowledging the degrees of uncertainty within this attempt. We finally estimate the required investment and subsidies by country and the cumulative and net gains by different implementation approach.




The Dynamics of Broadband Markets in Europe


Book Description

First in-depth analysis of broadband developments in Europe, combining qualitative and quantitative analysis, with chapter contributions provided by in-country experts.







Quality of Broadband Services in the EU


Book Description

In March 2010 the European Commission adopted "Europe 2020", a strategy for European economic and social development to promote smart, sustainable and inclusive growth to stimulate a high-employment economy to deliver social and territorial cohesion throughout the Member States. A key part of this initiative is a target to achieve universal broadband access by 2013 and give citizens access to much faster internet speeds across Europe by 2020. Higher broadband speeds have been defined as 30 Mbps or above, with a further goal of 50% or more European households subscribing to broadband connections above 100 Mbps. This study falls under the "Digital Agenda for Europe" which was adopted on 19 May 2010. The focus of this Agenda is a framework for stimulating growth and innovation notably through maximizing the potential of Information and communication technologies (ICTs). This initiative builds on previous activity by the European Commission, which has been monitoring coverage and take-up of broadband access in the EU since July 2002 through the Communications Committee. This research has shown that whilst progress has been made in extending fixed broadband coverage, with 97.2% of European households able to access broadband at the end of 2013, the figure drops to 89.8% in rural areas, and in some countries broadband covers just 63.5% or less of the rural households. In terms of take-up, there were 31 fixed broadband lines per 100 European citizens in June 2014.




EU Internet Law


Book Description

This comprehensive book provides a detailed overview of EU internet regulation in all its key areas, as well as giving a critical evaluation of EU policymaking and governance. This thoroughly revised second edition includes latest developments in the case law of the Court of Justice. It also discusses pending proposals in telecommunications, copyright and privacy laws as well as the new directions in internet regulation resulting from the Commission’s 2015 strategy document.







State aid for broadband infrastructure in Europe


Book Description

This original CERRE report reveals that the current level of public funds to support broadband deployment in Europe is insufficient compared against the ambitious targets for fibre to the home (FTTH). The report also suggests that the use of this funding is poorly co-ordinated, insufficiently monitored, and subject to rules which need to be simplified and updated. It is the first study of its kind: the authors have undertaken a systematic analysis of all of the 157 broadband measures notified to the European Commission by Member States over the past 15 years. Based on this research, the authors have identified critical issues and provided recommendations on how to better support the deployment of broadband infrastructure in Europe. The authors estimate that public funding from all sources to support broadband deployment in the period to 2020 amounts to around €7 billion per year. At this rate it will take Europe nearly 30 years to meet its FTTH targets. They also find wide variations in public funding for broadband between Member States: in the period 2003-18 France spent around €215 per capita and Italy €145, whilst the majority of Member States spent less than €100 per capita and some less than €10. “We found that broadband infrastructure receives less than 5% of available European funds, despite being a strategic priority for Europe and for the Juncker Commission”, said CERRE Research Fellow Richard Feasey. “Current public funding is insufficient if Europe is to achieve its Gigabit Society targets. It is equally important that whatever public funds are allocated, they are also used efficiently”. The authors provide recommendations for EU and national policy makers, including: 1. Mobilise grassroots interests in public funding of broadband with an EU-wide competition for funds. 2. Improve coordination between the European Investment Bank and the European Commission’s DG Competition to ensure that in each case the appropriate public funding instrument is used. 3. Increase the share of European funds allocated to broadband. 4. Revise the existing ‘Broadband State Aid Guidelines’ now to clarify elements such as: - when and how public funds can be used if commercial operators have no plans to deploy Very High Capacity infrastructure; - require that State Aid can only be used once adoption rates for a new technology have achieved certain thresholds in areas where it has already been deployed by the private sector; - consider allowing higher prices for broadband services provided by publicly funded networks in order to reduce the cost to the taxpayer and increase the coverage that can be obtained; - explain how the universal service provisions of the new EU Electronic Communications Code will ensure that all users can benefit from affordable access to publicly funded broadband networks; - simplify the regime so that measures to protect competition align with those that already apply to commercially-funded networks under the Significant Market Power regime and ensure enforcement. 5. Require Member States to provide more data to enable the evaluation of the effectiveness of State Aid measures. ‘Effectiveness’ should be measured by whether public funds achieve the goal of extending broadband services to the greatest number for the lowest cost to the taxpayer, and not simply in terms of competition or the time taken to approve the project. “If broadband infrastructure deployment is a priority for the EU, we think that the Commission should also explore how to formalise its Digital Agenda and Gigabit Society targets, to give Member States stronger incentives to meet those targets”, conclude the authors. Some facts and figures - Europe spends less than 5% of its budget on broadband - 65% of public funding for broadband comes from Member States - Estimated public funding from all sources allocated to broadband deployment in the EU in the period to 2020 amounts to around €7 billion per year - It will take Europe 29 years to complete FTTH deployment at current rates - Total expenditure by EU Members States for State Aid varies significantly - In the period 2003-18, the majority of Member States spent less than €100 per capita and some less than €10 - France spent around €215 per capita, Italy €145, and Germany €87 - Belgium, Luxembourg and Malta have achieved a relatively extensive and high capacity broadband deployment without relying on any form of State Aid whatsoever - There is a very large variation in the use of sources of funding by Member States




Global Broadband Battles


Book Description

This book explains why Asia leads the broadband revolution while the United States and Europe struggle to keep up.




EU Internet Law


Book Description

This book provides an overview of recent and future legal developments concerning the digital era, to examine the extent to which law has or will further evolve in order to adapt to its new digitalized context. More specifically it focuses on some of the most important legal issues found in areas directly connected with the Internet, such as intellectual property, data protection, consumer law, criminal law and cybercrime, media law and, lastly, the enforcement and application of law. By adopting this horizontal approach, it highlights – on the basis of analysis and commentary of recent and future EU legislation as well as of the latest CJEU and ECtHR case law – the numerous challenges faced by law in this new digital era. This book is of great interest to academics, students, researchers, practitioners and policymakers specializing in Internet law, data protection, intellectual property, consumer law, media law and cybercrime as well as to judges dealing with the application and enforcement of Internet law in practice.