Oireachtas Joint and Select Committees

Wednesday, 8 October 2014

Joint Oireachtas Committee on Transport and Communications

Mobile Telephone Coverage and High Speed Broadband Availability: Discussion

10:20 am

Mr. Kevin O'Brien:

On the two general points the Chairman made, certainly society's needs have changed. The step change where we see the market delivering to about 70% of the population with high-speed networks is to be welcomed. We have had huge progress in the past two years in that regard. As colleagues in the Department have pointed out, the challenge now is to make those high-speed fixed networks available to everybody in the country. From ComReg's perspective, we think the Department's ambition is correct. We believe it is correct to seek to have something future-proofed. One will always look back and say it was never possible, but one should try to build it once and build it well for the rural areas.

Anecdotal is a good way to describe people's comments on mobile coverage. ComReg gets approximately 30,000 complaints or issues brought to its attention a year. In the year to date some 17,000 issues by individual consumers have been brought to our attention. Of those 300 are complaints about mobile coverage. That is probably slightly more than in previous years, but there are other issues that are bigger for consumers in our experience. So coverage is certainly a topic.

I will make a few comments on what is going on in the marketplace. As I said earlier, on foot of the auction the operators are now upgrading to 4G; so there are changes to the networks throughout the country. We have the operators also changing some of their network structures and network share arrangements. So there is considerable activity at the infrastructural level and that can have implications.

There is also some evidence that while a smart phone does amazing things - compared with what we carried out in our pockets ten years ago the utility is fantastic - from time to time questions are raised over smart phones' capacity regarding voice calls. So there is a technical issue with the hardware which is commented on from time to time. With 100% of the population expecting to see a voice signal there all the time, 60% with smart phones expecting to see at least a 3G signal there all the time and now 300,000 people expecting to see a 4G signal there all the time, expectations have gone up. Networks are being built and there is perhaps some limited sense that in certain cases coverage is not what it could be. However, what we see coming is somewhat limited in that regard.