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The Australian telecommunications access regime. Presentation to ACMA International Training program 2006 Michael Eady Communications Group Compliance and Regulatory Operations Australian Competition and Consumer Commission michael.eady@accc.gov.au. The telecommunications access regime.
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The Australian telecommunications access regime Presentation to ACMA International Training program 2006 Michael Eady Communications Group Compliance and Regulatory Operations Australian Competition and Consumer Commission michael.eady@accc.gov.au
The telecommunications access regime • Overview of the regime • Declaration • Model terms and indicative prices • Access disputes and arbitrations • Undertakings • Conclusion
Aims of the regime • Part XIC of the Trade Practices Act 1974 • The aim of the regime is to “promote the long-term interests of end-users” • The regime is designed to be non-intrusive and promote commercial negotiation rather than regulator actions.
A telecommunications regime • The telco access regime was introduced in 1997. • It was felt that there were particular features of the telecommunications sector that required an additional and separate access regime.
Long-term interests of end-users (LTIE)? • Promote competition • Ensure any-to-any connectivity • Encourage: • economically efficient use of infrastructure • economically efficient investment in infrastructure
How does it work? • Four main aspects • Declaration of a service • Model terms and/or indicative prices • Arbitration of access disputes • Undertakings
What does declaration mean? • If a service is not declared • it is not subject to regulation • carriers may provide the service to other carriers, or not, as they wish. • If a service is declared • it is subject to regulation • carriers must comply with standard access obligations.
How does declaration occur? • Declaration can only occur if the ACCC is satisfied that declaration will promote the long-term interests of end-users. • The ACCC must hold a public inquiry,and prepare and publish a report, before it can declare a service.
How does declaration occur? • The ACCC needs to assess the need for regulation against the LTIE criteria discussed before • promotion of competition • ensuring any-to-any connectivity • economically efficient use of and investment in infrastructure
What factors would the ACCC examine? • Indicators that the ACCC might examine • market shares • pricing conduct of companies • existence of barriers to entry • presence of alternative services • presence of alternative infrastructure
What services have been declared? • Declared services include: • Unconditioned Local Loop Service (ULLS) • Line Sharing Service (LSS) • Mobile Terminating Access Service (MTAS) • PSTN Originating and Terminating access service (PSTN OTA) • Local Carriage Service (LCS)
What happens once a service is declared? • An access provider of a declared service is subject to standard access obligations: • must supply the service to other carriers • must ensure that the quality and faulthandling of the service provided to other carriers is equivalent to that which it provides itself • must allow interconnection
What happens once a service is declared? • Both access seekers and access providers can notify the ACCC of access disputes about the supply of the declared service. • Access providers can provide undertakings with proposed terms and conditions of supply.
What are model terms and indicative prices? • Two similar tools • Both give an indication of the ACCC’s view on the supply of declared services, but: • Indicative prices only relate to price • Model terms can relate to both price and non-price terms • However most access seekers and providers are more interested in price
Indicative prices • When the ACCC declares a service, it must provide pricing principles and may provide indicative prices • Pricing principles state the general approach that the ACCC will take to pricing the service, e.g. • Total Service Long Run Incremental Cost (TSLRIC) • Retail-minus-retail-cost (RMRC)
Indicative prices • Indicative prices demonstrate the application of a chosen pricing approach to generate particular prices • The ACCC must have regard to those prices when arbitrating an access dispute
Model terms • Similar to indicative prices but can relate to non-price terms as well, e.g. • network modernisation • billing procedures • creditworthiness • dispute resolution • confidentiality
How are model terms and indicative prices set? The ACCC considers model terms and indicative prices against the reasonableness matters in the legislation
Reasonableness • When assessing reasonableness, the ACCC must consider: • the long-term interests of end-users • the legitimate business interests of the access provider • the interests of access seekers • the direct costs of providing access • operational and technical requirements • the economically efficient operation of the network or service
What do the model terms and indicative prices achieve? • Idea of ACCC’s view: • the starting point it is likely to begin from when arbitrating an access dispute • a guide to how it might assess a submitted undertaking • Guide to commercial negotiation • gives industry an idea of appropriate price and non-price terms for the service
What is an access dispute? • Where two parties are unable to agree on the terms and conditions of supply of a declared service, one of them can: • notify the ACCC of an access dispute, and • seek arbitration of the dispute.
Telecommunications arbitrations • Telecommunications arbitrations are different to many typical commercial arbitrations in other fields. • There is often a lack of mutual commercial incentive to reach settlement. • The ACCC’s arbitration must be conducted according to statutory direction rather than purely commercial considerations.
Conduct of an arbitration • Arbitrations are conducted confidentially. • Opportunity for written and oral submissions on both procedural and substantive matters. • Other parties may apply to join dispute.
The ACCC’s role • The ACCC will determine terms and conditions according to the reasonableness criteria: • the long-term interests of end-users • the legitimate business interests of the access provider • the interests of access seekers • the direct costs of providing access • operational and technical requirements • the economically efficient operation of the network or service
The ACCC’s role • The ACCC may make both: • Interim determinations • Final determinations • These determinations may, after consultation with the parties to the dispute, be made public.
Effect of an ACCC determination • Sets terms and conditions (typically price) of access to the declared service between the two parties. • An interim determination applies for up to one year or until a final determination. • A final determination ends the arbitration and sets the terms and conditions of access for the service.
Effect of an ACCC determination • There is no right of appeal on the merits of an ACCC determination in an access dispute.
How many arbitrations? • The ACCC is currently arbitrating a large number of disputes: • ULLS – 9 disputes • LSS – 4 disputes • PSTN OTA – 4 disputes • Transmission – 1 dispute • MTAS – 19 disputes
What is an undertaking? • An undertaking presents the access seekers’ proposed terms and conditions for supply of the declared service. • An undertaking is initiated by the access provider. The ACCC cannot initiate undertakings.
Why have undertakings? • Access disputes: • are bilateral • can require a lot of resources • can take a long time • may have an uncertain outcome • The use of undertakings counter a lot of these concerns.
Recent undertakings • December 2004 - Telstra ULLS and LSS • December 2004 – Optus MTAS • April 2005 – Vodafone MTAS • October 2005 – Foxtel Set Top Unit * • October 2005 – Hutchison MTAS • December 2005 – Telstra ULLS • March 2006 – Telstra PSTN OTA and LCS
How is an undertaking assessed? • The ACCC must assess the undertaking’s terms and conditions against the reasonableness criteria: • the long-term interests of end-users • the legitimate business interests of the access provider • the interests of access seekers • the direct costs of providing access • operational and technical requirements • the economically efficient operation of the network or service
How is an undertaking assessed? • The ACCC can either accept the entire undertaking or reject the entire undertaking. • It cannot accept parts of the undertaking or accept the undertaking conditionally. • Public process with discussion paper, draft decision and two rounds of submissions from industry.
Rights of appeal • An ACCC decision to accept or reject an undertaking can be appealed on the merits to the Australian Competition Tribunal. • Recently, Telstra, Optus and Vodafone have all lodged appeals against ACCC undertaking decisions.
The telecommunications access regime • Declaration • Model terms and indicative prices • Access disputes and arbitrations • Undertakings
The telecommunications access regime • Beyond initial declaration, requires access seekers and providers to approach the ACCC • Favours commercially negotiated outcomes • Main tools are undertakings and arbitrations • Emphasis on “long-term interests of end-users” and “reasonableness”