Ju e
7
Da ish No
-Paper
o the Re ie
Market Po er SMP Guideli es
of the Sig ifi a t
New and updated SMP guidelines are a welcome and logical step in order to address future
market developments and situations.
The Danish Government welcomes the opportunity to comment on
the Co
on the Review of the Significant Market Power (SMP) Guidelines.
issio ’s
public consultation
The Danish Government finds it positive and relevant that the Commission has taken the initiative to
initiate a process with the purpose to update the guidelines for conducting market reviews in the
telecommunications sector.
The update is particularly relevant given the technological and market development that has taken place in
the telecommunications market since 2002, when the latest SMP guidelines were designed. In addition, the
Commission, as well as the Member States, have gained experience and developed practices and routines
that should be reflected in the forthcoming guidelines.
The complexity in the broadband market rises sharply in these years as a result of the NGA (Next
Generation Access) and VHC (Very High Capacity Networks) rollout. In Denmark and many other Member
States, this is because the rollout does not occur homogeneously across the country, but is carried out by
different local or regional players with different rollout strategies, investment potentials and time horizons.
Therefore, the roll-out
of road a d et orks, ith the e eptio of the i u e t’s et ork, is ot
nationwide.
This means that today the nationally defined markets for access to broadband infrastructure can be
expected to be replaced by a number of regional or perhaps even locally-defined markets for high speed
access products with different competitive conditions (monopolies) as there is no economic basis for rolling
out parallel high-speed networks. This could limit competition in the fixed broadband market as well as
reduce consumer choice as in these areas there will potentially be only a single operator to provide a high-
speed broadband connection.
The geographical definition of these markets cannot be expected to be stable over time, but will change
with the rollout or upgrading to high-speed infrastructure. These structural conditions pose a challenge in
promoting long-term competitive competition.
The development means that NRAs should progressively define and analyse a large number of smaller sub-
national markets in order to assess competitive conditions and possibly designate different operators with
SMP in defined geographic areas and impose, when justified, on them the necessary and proportional
access regulation in the respective areas.
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