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O2 cuts European roaming charge O2 cuts European roaming charge
(about 2 hours later)
UK mobile phone operator O2 is to stop charging its customers for incoming calls when they use their phones elsewhere in Europe. UK mobile phone operator O2 is to cut the charges its customers pay for incoming calls when they use their phones elsewhere in Europe.
For a £5 monthly fee, roaming customers will no longer pay for incoming calls.
O2's move will initially apply only in Spain, the home territory of its owner Telefonica, but will roll out across the rest of Europe next year.O2's move will initially apply only in Spain, the home territory of its owner Telefonica, but will roll out across the rest of Europe next year.
Customers will have to pay a £5 monthly fee to take advantage of the offer.
The decision comes as the European Union continues to press mobile firms to cut roaming costs.The decision comes as the European Union continues to press mobile firms to cut roaming costs.
By starting to scrap the charge levied by all operators in the past for receiving calls when abroad, we hope to begin removing that barrier Peter Erskine, O2 chairman and chief executive
O2 Spanish sister network Movistar will also bring in the free incoming calls option - although its Europe-wide service will start immediately.O2 Spanish sister network Movistar will also bring in the free incoming calls option - although its Europe-wide service will start immediately.
In addition, O2 will launch a new "high roamer" service offering outgoing calls at 25p a minute - which the company said was a 70% discount on standard rates.
Peter Erskine, chairman and chief executive of O2, said the company was responding to customer concerns over charges while using their phones abroad.
"The high roamer proposition was rated as the most popular concept when tested on customers, with many indicating that they currently left their phones switched off when travelling in order to avoid the cost of receiving a call," Mr Erskine said.
"By starting to scrap the charge levied by all operators in the past for receiving calls when abroad, we hope to begin removing that barrier," he added.
'Fantasy costs'
The EU has been investigating whether fees charged when mobile phones are used abroad are too high, since December 2004.
In June, the European Telecoms commissioner, Viviane Reding, put forward proposals intended to bring down what she called the "fantasy costs" being charged by some networks.
The plan would limit the fees companies impose on one another for providing roaming services, as well as restricting the profit margins they can charge to consumers.
Experts from the 25 member states have already begun discussions on the proposal, and the European Parliament began looking at the issue in September.