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Viewing cable 05PARIS3104, France is Europe's leader in broadband internet

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
05PARIS3104 2005-05-06 17:57 2011-08-24 00:00 UNCLASSIFIED Embassy Paris
This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 PARIS 003104 
 
SIPDIS 
 
STATE FOR EB/CIP 
USDOC FOR NTIA AND ITA 
FCC FOR INTERNATIONAL 
STATE PLEASE PASS TO USTR 
 
E.O. 12958: N/A 
TAGS: ECPS ETRD FR
SUBJECT: France is Europe's leader in broadband internet 
 
1.  Summary: In 2005, France became the biggest broadband 
market in Europe, largely on the back of surging demand and 
strong pro-competitive action from the regulator.  France is 
also one of Europe's most competitive markets, with prices 
about half those in other countries, including Britain. 
Rarely has France been so successful in promoting vigorous 
free-market competition.  End Summary. 
 
France's broadband market: the largest in Europe 
--------------------------------------------- --- 
2.  France looks set to be the first country in Europe to 
break through the seven million broadband user mark, 
according to European Competitive Telecom provider 
Association ECTA.  In March 2005, France became the leading 
broadband market in Europe with some 6.1 million ADSL lines 
and over 24,848,000 Internet users, representing 41.2% of 
the population.  One household in four has high-speed 
Internet access, 10.5% use mobile devices, and 5% have a 
wireless connection (WiFi). 
 
3.  France has experienced a boom in broadband growth since 
the middle of 2003.  Broadband penetration increased from 4% 
to 7% in the space of twelve months.  Growth has centered on 
the extension of DSL services, spurred by local loop 
unbundling under the aegis of France's telecoms regulator 
ART (Autorite de Regulation des Telecommunications).  Today, 
France has the second largest number of unbundled local 
loops in Europe.  In a recent study on behalf of the Prime 
Minister's IT policy office (CSTI - Conseil Strategique des 
Technologies de l'Information), consulting firm Analysys 
pointed out that local loop unbundling had been "an 
essential catalyst for innovation in the broadband market," 
especially in France where competition from alternative 
infrastructure such as cable is limited.  As a result, a 
variety of Internet Service Providers (ISPs) have emerged 
with differentiated offers, encouraging innovation and 
competition. 
 
France's major broadband players 
-------------------------------- 
4.  The champion of France's broadband boom in the retail 
market is Iliad, a young telecoms firm that offers some of 
the most advanced services in Europe.  Under the "Free" 
brand name, the company proposes a bundled triple play of 
telephony, 100 channels of digital television and broadband 
access for less than 30 euros a month.  Free had 17.4% of 
the ADSL market in France as of December 31, 2004.  Free, 
along with ISP market leader, France Telecom's Wanadoo, 
plans a large scale roll out of ADSL 2 Plus with complete 
coverage across France by the end of 2005. 
 
5.  Italian incumbent, Telecom Italia, the latest newcomer 
on the French broadband market, recently acquired Tiscali's 
French internet subsidiary, Tiscali France (formerly Liberty 
Surf), poised to become the third largest broadband internet 
provider in France.  Tiscali's French business counts 
344,000 high-speed Internet service customers. 
 
6.  To boost its base of 310,000 subscribers, France's loss- 
making fixed line operator Cegetel launched a new high-speed 
Internet connection and voice-over-internet service.  The 
company, which is reportedly losing 15 million euros a 
month, plans to offer customers up to 20 megabits of 
bandwidth, about 40 times faster than the entry-level 
broadband offer -- matching offers from Wanadoo and Free. 
Subscribers to the service, which will cost 14.90 euros a 
month, will be offered unlimited local and national calls to 
fixed-line numbers for another 10 euros a month using voice- 
over-internet protocol (VoIP) technology. 
7.  Cegetel further intends to enter the market for triple- 
play services -- pay-TV, Internet and VoIP -- in the fall, 
with the launch of its new multi-media C-Box.  Analysts say 
pay-TV over the Internet is the new driver of revenues and 
profits for high-speed Internet service providers. 
According to statements made by Vivendi, one of the owners 
of Cegetel, to French brokerage firm Kepler last week, they 
hope this new strategy will to boost Cegetel's subscriber 
base to put the company back on a solid profit-making path. 
8.  Bouygues Telecom, France's third mobile operator and the 
rebel of the French Telecom market, is taking an alternative 
approach to the explosive broadband market.  CEO Martin 
Bouygues recently said recently that it did not make 
financial sense for his company to take part in the 
consolidation of the ADSL market, because there are already 
eight major Internet service providers in France.  Instead, 
Bouygues, which has more than seven million mobile 
subscribers, is talking to a number of broadband service 
providers about offering a fixed/mobile service combination. 
The ambitious triple-play service provider Neuf Telecom, is 
allegedly the favorite to hook up with Bouygues.  Neuf 
Telecom is in talks to become a mobile virtual network 
operator (MVNO) on Bouygues's network, and such a deal could 
see Bouygues resell Neuf's broadband services to its 
customers. 
 
9.  As for the wholesale market, French regulator ART has 
just launched a public consultation on both the wholesale 
market for unbundled access and the wholesale market for 
broadband access at the national level, which was notified 
to the European Commission on April 13. 
 
Comment 
------- 
10.  With French ISP rates dropping to half of those in many 
other European countries, French broadband consumers are 
seeing the fruits of infrastructure investment combined with 
successful regulatory unbundling and line sharing policies. 
Rarely does France produce such a clear example of 
flourishing economic growth from the promotion of free- 
market competition.  But the picture is not rosey from all 
vantage points.  France Telecom is clearly concerned about 
losing market share to new entrants which can often be more 
innovative and flexible than the old behemoth incumbent. 
Some companies like Cegetel have been willing to absorb 
losses to stay in the game, but cannot brush off concerns 
from investors about being in the red year after year.  And, 
policymakers and politicians are concerned that growth and 
competition in broadband are thriving in metropolitan areas 
but leaving rural communities behind.  So, two major 
delegations of French regulators (December 2004) and local 
government leaders (April 2005) recently visited the U.S. to 
look for lessons and best practices to ensure that broadband 
deployment reaches all communities, including rural and 
isolated areas.  End comment. 
ROSENBLATT