Transcript Document
TRA Strategic Plan Date: November 2008 Table ClickoftoContents edit Master title style I. The benefits of liberalization II. The urgent need for reform III. TRA vision and roadmap IV. The way forward 2 The GoL, recognizing the need for reform, has committed to open the telecommunications sector to style competition and has recognized it as an Click to edit Master title important lever for economic development International Conference for Support to Lebanon” Paris III Conference “… there is a need to reduce the cost of production resulting mainly from unreliable supply of electricity, the high cost of telecommunication …” “The Government of Lebanon will implement reforms in order to improve competitiveness and reduce the cost of doing business in Lebanon…” “The government will seek a greater private sector role in sectors such as telecommunications…” ولبنان. §( إن قطاع االتصاالت هو محرّ ك أساسي لالقتصاد الوطني وهو يسهم في تعزيز اإلنماء المتوازن56) البيان الوزاري للحكومة يعمل على تقديم رؤية لهذا القطاع تهدف إلى بناء مجتمع المعلوماتية من أجل مواكبة ثورة االتصاالت العالمية 2008 والحكومة اللبنانية تلتزم في هذا السياق بتحرير قطاع االتصاالت وفتح السوق الستثمارات،وريادتها في المنطقة حكومة دولةالرئيس فؤاد السنيورة .القطاع الخاص والمنافسة وحماية حقوق المستهلك Telecommunications Law 431 / 2002 The TRA is charged with promoting competition in telecommunications (Telecommunications Law, Art. 5.1(C)). The Law provided for the liberalization of the telecommunications market by privatizing state-owned telecommunications entities and opening the market to private sector investments and competition. GoL Governmental Declarations in 2005 and 2008 commit the CoM to the liberalization of telecommunications 3 The Telecommunications Law 431 requires the creation of a proper Click to edit Master title style structure for a competitive telecommunications market Before Telecom Law 431 Ministry of Telecommunications Policymaker Regulator Operators After Telecom Law 431 MoT Policymaker 1 Set the general guidelines for telecom policy Recommend to CoM the award of some broadband licenses ( Mobile, int’ll voice & fixed) Review and propose to CoM the pricing of Radio Frequency MoT: policymaker, regulator and service provider CoM: Arbitrary regulatory role (e.g. issuing all licenses) No formal regulatory regime 3 TRA Regulator Draft and implement regulations Award telecom licenses Ensure competition and prevent anti-competitive behavior Manage on behalf of GoL radio frequencies Approve TRA budget & other TRA documents as per Law 431 Operators Incumbents & New Entrants 2 Provide telecom services to the public Install own and manage telecom networks and facilities Abide by TRA regulations, decisions and licenses 4 There is a wide range of benefits stemming from liberalization that TRA hopes Click to toachieve edit Master title style Benefits the Customer Increase service penetration Increase customer choice Improve price to quality ratio Introduce new technologies and services Reach underserved areas Benefits the Telecommunications Industry Keep up with technological advances Ensure more effective infrastructure Improve sector productivity Increase overall telecom revenues Attract private and foreign capital Improve connectivity and penetration of ICT Benefits the Economy Generate revenues from privatization and from licenses Spur job creation throughout the economy Join international trade organizations (e.g. Union for the Mediterranean) and global trading systems (e.g. EU association) Catalyze growth of information economy Improve global competitiveness of the economy Improve general economic performance 5 Table ClickoftoContents edit Master title style I. The benefits of liberalization II. The urgent need for reform III. TRA vision and roadmap IV. The way forward 6 The Lebanese market for fixed and mobile services has been stagnant Click to edit Master title style and the data and internet services have been constrained Strengths Fixed Voice Mobile Data Weaknesses Relatively good copper infrastructure Competitive price per minute compared to regional countries Pent up demand for mobile services High mobile revenues Relatively competitive market Lucrative segment New wireless technologies deployed Pent-up demand for data and internet services 7 De jure MoT monopoly No incentive to upgrade the infrastructure and introduce new technologies Low penetration rate Stagnant growth High charges Lag behind in terms of new technologies Low market penetration Limited choice in mobile packages Shortage of adequate investments leading to congestion in Mobile network and bad service quality Shortage in International bandwidth Slow DSL launch Access hindered by incumbent operator High international bandwidth prices Discriminatory allocation of bandwidth Uncertainty over regulatory framework Penetration of telecommunications service in Lebanon between 2000 and Click to edit Master title style 2007 has increased very slowly 35% 30% 25% 20% 15% 10% 5% 0% 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 Fixed line penetration Mobile penetration Broadband penetration Internet penetration Source: Globalcomms, operator data, ITU, Arab Advisors Group 8 2007 The telecommunications market is still underdeveloped when compared to Click to edit Master title style other countries Fixed Line Penetration vs. GDP per Capita (2005) Mobile Penetration vs. GDP per Capita (2005) 200% 140% 160% 120% Ireland 100% Bahrain Bulgaria Hungary Poland 80% Chile Egypt Jordan Venezuela Slovakia 60% Romania Tunisia Algeria 40% South Africa Libya 20% Italy y = 0.3441Ln(x) - 2.1968 R2 = 0.6852 Italy Bahrain United Arab Kuw ait 100% Ireland Emirates Singapore Hungary Bulgaria Qatar Slovakia 80% Russia South Africa Poland Chile Jordan Romania Saudi Arabia 60% Tunisia Venezuela Algeria y = 0.2162Ln(x) - 1.1851 40% Morocco Libya R2 = 0.7209 LEBANON Mobile Penetration PSTN Penetration 140% 120% 100% Czech Republic 20% 10,000 20,000 30,000 40,000 50,000 60,000 GDP per Capita (USD/ Year) US 70% UAE 60% 50% Saudi Arabia Bahrain 40% Venezuela Peru Egypt LEBANON KSA Algeria 30% 20% Jordan Egypt Libya 10% 0% 0 UK 80% Egypt LEBANON Morocco 0% 90% Internet Penetration Singapore United Arab Emirates 180% Internet Penetration vs. GDP per Capita (2005) Germany Italy Spain France Qatar y = 0.1165Ln(x) - 0.689 R2 = 0.483 0% 0 10,000 20,000 30,000 40,000 50,000 60,000 GDP per Capita (USD/ Year) Sources: Economist Intelligence Unit, interviews with industry 9 0 10,000 20,000 30,000 40,000 GDP per Capita (USD/ Year) 50,000 The cost of a mobile postpaid minute in Lebanon is among the highest in the region due to the lacktitle of competition and the legacy of a high excise Click to edit Master style tax Mobile Postpaid Peak On-net Minute Rates (2006) (US$ cents per peak minute) Mobile Prepaid Peak On-net Minute Rates (2006) (US$ per peak minute) Mobinil Umniah Mobinil Batelco Fastlink 4 Etisalat 8 MobileCom 8 Umniah 8 6 6 7 Batelco MobileCom Etisalat 12 8 Fastlink STC 7 14 8 8 60% higher than the lowest regional rate STC Alfa Alfa Note: All Rates corresponds to the lowest first minute rate 36 13 MTC Touch MTC touch 17 More than double the lowest regional rate 13 10 38 A typical internet user in Lebanon will spend eight times more than in Click to edit Master title style similar countries due to low download ceilings Monthly charge to use 15 GB/month (500MB/day) using 1Mbps ADSL connection $200 $180 $160 $140 $120 $100 $80 $60 $40 $20 $0 Lebanon (IDM) Egypt (Nile OnLine) UAE (Du) Source: Operators Websites 11 Jordan (Orange) Lithuania (Zebra) The penetration of DSL services in Lebanon is the lowest in the Click to edit Master title style Region, due in part to the late start 12 Comparison of DSL penetration (% of population) with the Arab Countries in 2008 11 10 8 6 6 4 4 2 1 2 3 2 0 Lebanon Source: Operators Websites Tunisia Morocco Kuwait 12 KSA Qatar UAE Lebanon should have much higher broadband connectivity given its GDP Click to edit Master title style per capita Broadband Penetration (subscribers per 100 inhabitants) 2007 5 Dominica St Vincent et Grenadine 4.5 China 4 3.5 3 Belize 2.5 Venezuela Jamaica 2 Maldives Peru Colombia Morocco 1.5 1 Iran Vietnam Georgia Algeria Jordan Egypt Philippines 5,000 Thailand Cape Verde Lebanon 4,000 Dominican Republic Tunisia Fiji 0.5 0 3,000 Grenada 6,000 7,000 8,000 9,000 GDP per capita (US$, 2007) Source: UN E-Government Readiness Survey, 2008 13 The limited bandwidth available to Lebanese users means that Click edit Master style only a to limited range oftitle applications and services can be offered Indicative Application Bandwidth Demand (Mbps) Services technically not feasible Services not offered due to bandwidth limitations Telepresence Virtual Reality 5 second CD download Quality Video Streaming Multi-Channel TV Video on Demand Video Streaming Current Limit on Residential Broadband Multiplayers game Video Conference MP3 streaming Online games Teleconference Web Surfing VOIP Email 0.01 0.1 1 10 100 Estimation of bandwidth requirements for the UK households: By 2008, demand for the most bandwidth intensive households could reach 18 Mbps downstream and 3 Mbps upstream By 2012, the bandwidth demand for the most intensive bandwidth households could reach 23 Mbps downstream and 14 Mbps upstream 14 Sources: New Zealand National Broadband Strategy , Broadband Stakeholder Group UK Table ClickoftoContents edit Master title style I. The benefits of liberalization II. The urgent need for reform III. TRA vision and roadmap IV. The way forward 15 As a first step in assuming its duties as per Law 431, the TRA has defined Click to edit Master title style its mission statement and objectives TRA Prerogatives ( Non-exhaustive list) Issue regulations and draft Decrees (Art 5) Liberalize the market and take any necessary measure to reach a competitive market (Art 30) Manage Radio Frequency, Interconnection agreements, numbers, equipment import, etc.. (Art 29) License telecommunications service providers and radio frequency bands (Art 20) Resolve disputes between service providers (Art 43) Mission Statement To establish a regulatory environment that enables a competitive telecommunications market to deliver state-of-the-art services at affordable prices to the broadest spectrum of the Lebanese population إيجاد بيئة ُمنظِ مة من شأنها أن تساعد سوق االتصاالت في تقديم آخر ما توصلت إليه التكنولوجيا في مجال خدمات االتصاالت . وعلى أوسع نطاق ممكن للمواطن اللبناني وللشركات اللبنانية، ومعقولة،بأسعار تنافسية 16 The TRA's draft Liberalization Roadmap proposes introducing competition Click Master title style across to all edit telecommunications markets while allowing LibanTelecom some exclusivity over some services for a limited period of time 2009 Mobile 3 Network Operator Virtual Network MNVOs PSTN/ Basic Telephony * 1 Network Operator Reseller Access Broadband International Access 2010 ** National Facilities Service Provider 5+ *** Reseller Open licensing Market Review License Award Notes * Liban Telecom expected ** TRA is still considering the appropriate number of NBLs to issue *** Two for the mobile licenses, one for Liban Telecom and two others for the NBLs for data traffic only 17 2011 2012 TRA's objective is for Lebanon to become a global leader in Click to edit Master title style broadband communications within 10 years Residential services in 2018 • High speed Internet – surfing and data transfer • Digital Entertainment – video • Communication – voice • For around US$ 600/month and up to 1Gbps speed triple play services: Business Services in 2018 • High speed Internet and data transfer • Digital Entertainment – video and teleconferencing • Communication – voice 18 Target: 400,000 Broadband accounts in 2018 • For around US$40/month and up to 10Mbps speed Quadruple play services: 18 Lebanon has to improve its telecommunications infrastructure and open it Click to edit Master title style to competition Fixed MoT Infrastructure: currently the only provider of national internet and data transmission, however needs major upgrade of national and Competition international capacity. National Broadband Licenses: Provide a best in class alternative national networks (core, metropolitan and access), enabling the national transmission and provision of high speed communication Broadband Access Licenses: Unleash competition on the access level and provide more choice to consumers ( e.g. incumbent data service providers) Therefore The TRA plans to issue licenses (through an international public auction) in order to establish across Lebanon best in class core, metropolitan and access networks : 1. Two new NBLs (alongside LibanTelecom) 2. Unrestricted number of Broadband Access Licenses (for existing DSP and new licenses) taking into account limitations in the availability of spectrum resource 19 The combination of new licensees will compete in deploying a nationwide high-speed international gateway for Data services Click to edit Masternetwork, title style and access to customers Two National Broadband Licenses • • • • • All services except mobile and LT’s exclusivity Nationwide core/metro/access coverage International Gateway for Data services 15 years licenses Awarded through international auction if competing applications Unlimited Broadband Access Licenses • • • • • All services except mobile and LT’s exclusivities Only metro/access for 3 years (core permitted thereafter) No international gateway for 3 years (IGW permitted thereafter) 10 year license Awarded through auction only for scarce access spectrum Liban Telecom License • • • • • All services, including mobile Nationwide core/metro/access coverage International gateway 20 year license Awarded under the Telecommunications Law TRA is considering how to license geographically-restricted metro licenses (including municipalities, real esta developers, business parks, etc) 20 The TRA plans to launch the licensing of national broadband networks in Click to edit Master title style Q1 2009 Broadband Policy Statement Draft RFA for Consultation Licensing Regulation IS and RoW Decrees Spectrum Management & Licensing Regulation Final Broadband Licenses AUCTION Q 1 09 TRA ready to grant licenses that do not require spectrum The TRA is making steady progress in developing a regulatory framework to introduce competition in the provision of broadband services. The auction for the National Broadband Licenses and the Broadband Access Licenses will take place at the end of Q1 2009 21 21 The Mobile Auction has been suspended in January 2008, but could be Click to edit Master title style held within 8 weeks from a Government of Lebanon GoL decision November 2007 Mobile Auction Launch: RFA published January 2008 Licensing Process Freeze T0 Process Relaunched T1= T0 + 10 weeks Auction – Announcement of two winning bidders T1 + 8 weeks Handover completed Crucial Phase that should be completed smoothly and in the specified time Most of the preparatory work for the auction has been completed Until now, and despite the delay encountered, around 10 major regional and international players of the telecommunications sector have shown interest in the auction In order to relaunch the process (T0) the following steps should be completed: Agreement on the revised transaction structure Draft Law authorizing the selling of the assets and revised RFA approved by the CoM Law authorizing the selling of the assets enacted by the Parliament 22 The licensing of the two mobile operations and the opening of the mobile market to competition aims atMaster ensuring title lowerstyle retail prices, quality of service improvements as Click to edit well as the provision of advanced services Rights and Obligations of Mobile Licensees Scope of Mobile Licenses: Provision of any service over the licensed frequencies, including 3G mobile broadband services. Installation, ownership and operation of a facilities-based international gateway. Provision of all international services to their own end users. Obligations: Geographic roll-out and coverage obligations Certain payment obligations: License fees Spectrum fees Numbering Fees Provision of mobile number portability to their customers to ensure a fair consumer choice. Provision of national roaming to the third entrant to allow a faster development of competition. TRA will undertake periodic market reviews to analyze the state of competition and the need to introduce new facilities-based operators or services-based resellers 23 Telecom also calls forstyle additional structural reforms Click toLaw edit431 Master title MoT Restructuring of MoT – NOT YET STARTED Current Structure Mandated Structure Under the Telecom Law MoT MoT Directorate General of Construction and Equipment Directorate General of Posts Directorate General of Post Directorate General of Telecommunications Directorate of General Control Joint Administrative Division Directorate of Common Administrative Division of Central Control Directorate of Operation and Maintenance LT The TRA views the creation and privatization of Liban Telecom as a major step in the history of the telecommunications sector and a central component of future growth 24 In line with EU's best practices,the regulatory framework adopted by TRA Click to edit Master title style ensures the success of liberalization Drafting Stage Draft Ready Stage Unbundling Regulation VOIP Policy Statement National Roaming Accounting Separation Regulation Consultation Stage Spectrum Refarming and Packaging Plan Improving FM Broadcasting Final Review (TRA Board) Liberalization Roadmap Broadband Policy Statement Licensing Regulation Universal Service CS / CPS Issued Significant Market Power Regulation Decisions: • VSAT, • Trial IPTV • Spectrum trial Allocation for MoT / OGERO Interconnection Regulation Pricing Regulation * Interconnection Interim Pricing Decision Spectrum Pricing Opinion Spectrum Management and Licensing Regulation * Decision approved by the board, but will be issued concurrently with the Mobile Auction Award. Type Approval Regulation Quality of Service Regulation Decision for establishment of call centers Lebanese National Frequency Table Consumer Affairs Regulation 25 Table ClickoftoContents edit Master title style I. The benefits of liberalization II. The urgent need for reform III. TRA vision and roadmap IV. The way forward 26 Our Commitment Click to edit Master title style The TRA is committed to bringing the country back to the international telecommunications scene through market liberalization The TRA is committed to reconnecting the Lebanese population with the world. We intend to accomplish this by building a thriving, innovative, and competitive telecommunications market place, driven by a technologically advanced infrastructure-based sector and offering services at internationally competitive prices and quality The TRA is committed to promoting the interests of telecom Lebanese consumers in the market to make sure they are getting good quality of service at affordable and competitive prices and that their right to safe, secures and confidential access to telecommunications is safeguarded 27