Vodafone calls for unity to advance Europe’s digital ambitions

Vodafone has called for a connectivity union to help accelerate Europe’s digital ambitions and unleash its ability to compete on a global scale.

Europe’s future economic success, it says, will be underpinned by connectivity, adding that only through 5G standalone will European businesses be able to capitalise fully on the industrial value of the internet and emerging technologies such as AI. Connectivity must not become the AI bottleneck.

The European Commission has recognised some of the difficulties facing the connectivity sector, including fragmentation, excessive costs and different rules for different companies despite offering the same services. These, says Vodafone, have put the achievement of the digital decade targets at risk, and ultimately led to Europe facing a serious competitive disadvantage. Europe, it says, now needs critical action from its policymakers to turn the ship around and close the 5G investment gap.

“The EU cannot reclaim its digital competitiveness and retake a leadership position without an urgent reset of Europe’s telecoms policy regime,” said Joakim Reiter, chief external and corporate affairs officer at Vodafone (www.vodafone.com). “That’s why we’re now calling for a new connectivity union that would bring together the commission, governments and industry to more aggressively tackle the shortcomings in Europe’s connectivity sector before it is too late. If the EU gets this right, it has a chance to build the world’s best connectivity, delivering the services and innovation that its citizens and businesses deserve. This would catalyse the industrial internet, and make Europe a truly exciting place to invest.”

Vodafone’s response to the European Commission’s consultation white paper, “How to master Europe’s digital infrastructure needs?” (digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu/en/library/white-paper-how-master-europes-digital-infrastructure-needs), outlines five policy pillars for a digital communications framework for Europe that are required to end the piecemeal policy approach to telecoms and lay the foundation for a connectivity union:

  • Scale and market structure: Ensuring investment competition in mobile and fixed markets; This would include higher levels of in-country mobile consolidation and a more targeted application of the SMP framework in fixed markets during the migration from copper to fibre. Removing barriers to the provision of cross-border business services;Accelerate the scale benefits of the digital single market by further harmonising and simplifying rules.
  • Spectrum: Enforcing pro-investment spectrum policies; Longer, or perpetual, licences would unlock network deployment business cases. Harmonised rules would prevent national regulators from using spectrum policy to fragment markets further, or to extract value from the sector through artificially high spectrum fees.
  • Same service, same rules: Ensuring the policy framework promotes technological innovation; Services should be regulated in a fair way based on the services offered and frameworks designed to prevent gatekeeper behaviour. This would level the playing field in the digital ecosystem, guaranteeing equivalent protection for end users irrespective of whether the service provider is a telecoms operator or tech company.
  • Security and resilience: Security requirements must be risk-based, proportionate, vertically harmonised, and implemented in consultation with industry; Security requirements should not lead to fragmentation across the single market. A more harmonised security framework should be adopted, underpinned by guidelines, common standards, certification, reporting and notification requirements, while limiting localisation obligations.
  • Sustainability and social responsibility: Ensuring all stakeholders commit to sustainability, economic and societal responsibility; Create a more stable and predictable policy and investment environment that incorporates the cost of sustainability requirements in the framework for economic regulation and ensures all ecosystem players make responsible use of networks and services.

As 4G heralded the consumer internet age, Vodafone believes 5G is key to unlocking the potential of the industrial internet for Europe, transforming the way businesses operate. For manufacturing, where Europe has an opportunity to regain its leadership, the impact of digitalisation could be worth an estimated €2tn a year for the sector globally.

But the lack of a connectivity union risks impacting Europe’s wider economic competitiveness. Vodafone believes the incoming European Commission now has a unique opportunity to drive change and looks forward to working together with all key stakeholders on this “exciting journey”.