Telecoms: Lithuania withdraws proposed regulatory measures on network access market

Published: 23 March 2010 y., Tuesday

Laidas
On 16 March 2010 the Lithuanian Authority, Ryšių reguliavimo tarnyba (RRT), informed the European Commission that it was withdrawing its proposed measure on network infrastructure access markets. These access services are used by alternative operators to connect their customers to telecoms services like telephone and internet. The Commission had earlier this month raised serious doubts about the compatibility of the proposed regulation with the principles of EU competition law and EU's telecoms rules and had launched a two month investigation (see IP/10/266). RRT has now indicated to the Commission that it intends to revise its findings and notify the revised measure to the Commission.

EU Digital Agenda Commissioner Neelie Kroes said: "The withdrawal of this measure will allow the Lithuanian regulator to address the concerns raised by the Commission. We will work together with RRT to resolve this matter so that it does not restrict competition on the telecoms market or penalise Lithuanian consumers."

On 11 January 2010, the Lithuanian telecoms regulator notified the Commission of its plans to regulate the market for unbundled access to local lines, i.e. the "last mile" of a telecoms network before reaching the customer. Technically, the line connecting a specific consumer can be separated from the other lines (the "bundle") traditionally owned by the incumbent and can be used by alternative operators to provide broadband and fixed telephone services to that customer.

The Lithuanian national telecoms regulator had identified differences between unbundled access provided through copper lines and optical fibre-to-the-home (FTTH) local lines and had defined separate copper and FTTH access markets. In addition, RRT had proposed to exclude unbundled access through fibre-to-the-building (FTTB) lines from both markets (see IP/10/266).

The Commission was concerned that the market definition proposed by RRT was not in line with the principles of competition law and EU telecoms rules and called for further market clarifications and data from RRT and market players.

The Lithuanian regulator has now withdrawn its measure. RRT will revise its findings and notify its revised measure to the Commission at a later stage.

 

Šaltinis: europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

First Japan-Baltic States charter flight

On August 4, the first chartered flight of "The Japan Airlines" will arrive from Tokyo in the Baltic States and land in Riga. more »

EBRD water loan to help construction of affordable housing in Siberia

1.6 billion rouble loan to overcome problems holding up expansion of city of Surgut more »

Nordic Shared Services & Outsourcing Forum 2009, 26 – 27 August, Sweden

Nordic Shared Services & Outsourcing Forum 2009, 26 – 27 August, Sweden more »

Lithuania among Least Expensive Countries in Europe

Results of the latest price survey by Eurostat show that Lithuania is on the list of the TOP 10 least expensive countries in Europe. more »

Digital economy can lift Europe out of crisis, says Commission report

The European Commission's Digital Competitiveness report published today shows that Europe's digital sector has made strong progress since 2005. more »

Obama talks GDP, jobs

US President Barack Obama said that the economy was weaker than he thought when he took office, but there are signs of improvement. more »

EIB and UniCredit support the economy in Central and South Eastern Europe: total funding scheduled in 2009 in the region exceeds EUR 1.2 bn

The EIB and UniCredit Group strengthen their cooperation to implement the Joint Action Plan of the largest multilateral lenders in Central and Eastern Europe who have committed to provide up to EUR 24.5 bn lending to the SME sector hit by the global economic crisis. more »

During the first six months of this year AB Bank SNORAS earned LTL 24 million profit

Within the first half of 2009, AB Bank SNORAS earned LTL 24 million of unaudited profit. more »

69% of workers helped by EU globalisation fund found another job

10,000 workers were helped by the European Globalisation Adjustment Fund (EGF) last year and of these, more than two-thirds found a new job, according to a report adopted by the European Commission today. more »

SEB awarded as the best Internet bank in Lithuania

SEB recently won awards for best consumer Internet banks in Lithuania and Latvia in a ranking presented by Global Finance Magazine. more »