The ACCC today released a draft decision not to declare a domestic mobile roaming service. A domestic mobile roaming service could potentially have been used by mobile network operators (MNOs) to facilitate sharing of existing networks to maximise mobile network coverage.
The ACCC’s draft decision was guided by the legislative criteria in Part XIC of the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth). The key criterion is whether declaration would have been in the long-term interests of end users; the legislation specifies that this consideration must be informed by whether declaration would promote competition and the efficient use of, or investment in, infrastructure.
The ACCC also commented on a number of other measures which could address concerns regarding coverage in regional areas of Australia. This included measures relating to transparency and network quality, improving the operation of infrastructure sharing, and improving the spectrum regulatory framework. Submissions have been invited on the draft decision.
Frontier Economics (Asia-Pacific) provided an expert report for Vodafone Hutchison Australia on pricing issues for a regulated mobile roaming service.