Access key 0 - Accessibility, Access key 2 - Jump to content, Access key 7 - Jump to navigation
Skip To Content | Skip To Navigation
 

Home > Media and Analysts > News Release Archive > 2006 > Oct > 10|10|06


10|10|06

Ofcom and ComReg publish Joint Report on Inadvertent Mobile Roaming

Ofcom and ComReg (the Republic of Ireland’s Commission for Communications Regulation) today publish the report of their Joint Working Group on cross-border inadvertent roaming.

The Joint Working Group (JWG) was set up in April 2004 in order to explore solutions to problems - and especially the problem of inadvertent roaming - affecting telecommunications users in both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland. The report was delivered to a Joint Ministerial meeting held in London last week attended by Northern Ireland Minister, Maria Eagle, and the Republic of Ireland Minister,Noel Dempsey.

The issue of inadvertent roaming - where mobile phone users connect to a base station in the Republic of Ireland while in Northern Ireland and vice versa, often incurring international charges as a result, - has been a matter of concern not only to the two governments but also to public representatives, business and consumer groups, as well as individual consumers, for some time. Successive Northern Ireland and Republic of Ireland Ministers have called upon the mobiie operators to respond to these concerns and requested that Ofcom and ComReg work with the operators to find solutions. Of particular concern to Ministers has been the lack of tariff offerings for pre-pay customers who make up nearly 75% of all customers on both sides of the border.

Today’s report indicates that

In the longer term, developments at the European level on international roaming generally are likely to become the focus of attention of the market and offer the prospect of wide-ranging changes in tariffs not only between Northern ireland and the Republic of Ireland, but also across the European Union.

The full statement is available from the Related Items.

Ends.


Back to top Back to top

Related Items