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The
Eastern Caribbean Telecommunications Authority has announced that OECS
Ministers for Telecommunications and Cable & Wireless have reached
an agreement on a new Price Regulation Regime.
Under the terms of this agreement, Cable & Wireless fixed line customers
in the ECTEL Member States could pay as much as 22% less for their fixed-to-fixed
local calls from 1 December 2004, with a further 20% reduction for fixed-to-fixed
local calls coming in December 2005.
The agreement was formally signed at a ceremony held at the Grand Beach
Resort in Grenada on July 30 and covers a four-year period for the Member
States of Dominica, Grenada, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia and St. Vincent
and the Grenadines.
Local calls on the fixed network will decrease from 9 cents (peak period),
8 cents (off-peak period) and 6 cents (weekends) to 7 cents, 5 cents,
and 5 cents respectively on 1 December 2004.
In addition, off-peak and Weekend rates will further decrease to 4 cents
and 4 cents respectively on 1 December 2005.
The Price Cap Plan must now be approved by the National Telecommunications
Regulatory Commission (NTRC) in each ECTEL Member State.
However, all sides are confident that once implemented, the new regulatory
pricing mechanism will result in benefits to consumers of fixed line services
throughout the ECTEL Member States.
ECTEL led the negotiations on behalf of its Member States and was advised
by a consortium of international consultants with funding from the World
Bank.
Eliud T. Williams, Managing Director of ECTEL stated that this new regulatory
regime represents a significant step forward in the complete liberalization
of the Telecommunications sector in the OECS.
He believes that customers can look forward to further improvements in
service quality and reductions in prices in the years ahead.
Chairman of Council of Ministers of ECTEL, Reginald Austrie said he believes
that properly and competitively priced telecommunications services through
efficiently managed networks "provides us with the best chance for
transforming our societies through the level of economic growth that would
provide our people with job opportunities that fully utlize their knowledge
and skills".
"It is against this background that I welcome the price cap regime",
he added.
Executive Vice President of Cable & Wireless in the Eastern Caribbean,
Paul Aspin, says that "C&W is particularly excited to deliver
a new innovative fixed line solution for our residential customers with
the introduction of 60 free evening and weekend minutes.
That's a call to your loved one every day, on Cable & Wireless, free
of charge."
He further stated that "this agreement ushers in a new era of closer
cooperation with the Governments and the implementation of a regulatory
regime that is consistent with international standards."
The agreement also makes provision for additional benefits to consumers
- average reductions of 10 cents per minute for fixed-to-mobile calls
by December 1, 2005.
Both residential and business consumers will benefit from these changes.
There is yet more value offered to residential customers - residential
fixed customers will get 60 FREE minutes of local fixed-to-fixed calls
in the evenings and on weekends with effect from 1 December 2004.
This means that as much as 25 percent of existing users will have no payments
to make for their evening and weekend locals calls and this percentage
could increase as the volume of free local call goes up from 60 to 80
in December 2005.
Once approved by the National Telecommunications Regulatory Commission
in each country, the Agreement will commit C&W to the specific rate
reductions outlined above, effective from December 1, 2004, over a two-year
period.
The agreement also imposes a "price cap" regime of regulation
on C&W.
This regime will require C&W to realize efficiency gains in each year
and to pass on some of these gains to its customers in the form of lower
rates.
The Agreement also makes provision to harmonize rates across the ECTEL
Member States with divergences for some services, such as local calls,
limited to 35%.
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