EU has new plan to scrap mobile roaming surcharges

EU has new plan to scrap mobile roaming surcharges

PanARMENIAN.Net - The European Commission has come up with new proposals for ending mobile roaming surcharges within the EU, after a public outcry forced it to withdraw previous proposals, Fortune reports.

Europeans will from the middle of next year be able to use their domestic mobile data subscription across EU member states without paying any extra fees, no matter how long they travel for, the Commission said Wednesday.

However, there will also be mechanisms to prevent “abuse,” meaning people will have to use SIM cards from the countries where they live, or from countries with which they have “stable links.” It’s not yet clear to what degree people will need to prove these links, or how.

The Commission has for years been promising to wipe out roaming surcharges, as it tries to create a true digital single market. Its efforts have resulted in a gradual phasing-out of these surcharges, and June 15, 2017, was the point where everyone had agreed people would be able to use their phones across the EU as they do at home.

However, this agreement came with a vague “fair use” clause, designed to protect mobile operators from losing money, and earlier this month the Commission sparked outrage when it said what it thought fair use should entail, Fortune says.

The Commission said mobile operators should be able to place limits of at least 90 days on their customers’ surcharge-free data roaming while in other EU countries.

Days later, Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker forced his vice president, Andrus Ansip, and digital economy commissioner, Günther Oettinger, to make a humiliating climbdown—they had to withdraw their proposal and go back to the drawing board.

The new proposal comes with no limits on time nor on data volume, but Ansip and Oettinger said Wednesday that they would let operators “intervene if they detect abuse.”

Operators will be able to charge their customers small extra fees for roaming if, for example, they note that they hardly use any mobile data while at home, but loads of data while roaming. The “subscription and sequential use of multiple SIM cards by the same customer while roaming” will also be seen as suspicious.

The problem is that operators in some countries, such as the Baltics, charge customers as much as five or six times less than those in others, like in Germany or Belgium.

Ansip said the Commission wanted to stop people from “buying packages of SIM cards from a cheap country and selling in countries where packages are at a much higher level.”

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