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Viewing cable 07BRUSSELS3509, U.S.-EU INFORMATION SOCIETY DIALOGUE REINFORCES ICT

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
07BRUSSELS3509 2007-12-14 14:07 2011-08-26 00:00 UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY USEU Brussels
VZCZCXRO2113
PP RUEHAG RUEHDF RUEHIK RUEHLZ RUEHPOD RUEHROV
DE RUEHBS #3509/01 3481407
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 141407Z DEC 07
FM USEU BRUSSELS
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY
RUCPDOC/USDOC WASHDC PRIORITY
RUEAFCC/FCC WASHDC PRIORITY
INFO RUCNMEM/EU MEMBER STATES COLLECTIVE
RUCNMEU/EU INTEREST COLLECTIVE
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 05 BRUSSELS 003509 
 
SIPDIS 
 
FCC FOR WEISLER 
DOC FOR NTIA - ALEXANDER 
 
STATE FOR EUR/ERA, EB/CIP, EB/IPE 
 
PLEASE PASS TO USTR 
 
SENSITIVE 
 
NOT FOR INTERNET DISTRIBUTION 
 
SIPDIS 
 
E.O. 12958:  N/A 
TAGS: ECPS ECIN EINV EINT ETRD ECON EUN
SUBJECT: U.S.-EU INFORMATION SOCIETY DIALOGUE REINFORCES ICT 
COOPERATION 
 
REF: USEU BRUSSELS 3391 
 
1. (SBU) SUMMARY.  U.S. and EU public and private officials held 
warm talks December 3-4 on information and communication technology 
developments and policy cooperation.  At this year's Information 
Society Dialogue on December 4, the U.S. and EU discussed broadband 
growth, political debates over the new Commission telecom reform 
package, mobile television policy controversies, spectrum policy, 
and VoIP.  The group committed to specific U.S.-EU ICT cooperation, 
including: a roadmap for deeper RFID collaboration in 2008 under the 
Transatlantic Economic Framework; joint efforts to prevent 
third-country standards development from presenting barriers to our 
firms; looking at ways to cooperate further on e-Health, 
e-Accessibility and ICT research; and seeking to coordinate telecom 
assistance to developing countries.  At the December 3 
public-private Digital Economy Workshop (DEW), many telecom 
incumbent firms opposed Commission plans for functional separation 
and a new telecom market authority.  Firms favored EU plans to 
rationalize EU spectrum allocation to boost investment, and said 
meeting privacy concerns and limiting regulation will be critical to 
the success of next generation internet services.  END SUMMARY. 
 
ISD OPENS WITH REVIEW OF MARKET DEVELOPMENTS 
-------------------------------------------- 
 
2. (SBU) A U.S. interagency delegation and a European Commission 
group led by the Information Society Directorate (DG INFSO) met 
December 4 in Brussels for the U.S.-EU Information Society Dialogue 
(ISD), an almost-annual exchange on trans-Atlantic information and 
communication technology (ICT) market and policy developments.  This 
year's U.S. delegation was led by Ambassador David Gross from 
State's Economic and Energy Bureau (EEB/CIP) and Helen Domenici, 
International Bureau Chief for FCC.  The Commission delegation was 
headed by Fabio Colasanti, Director General of DG INFSO, and several 
Unit Heads in DG INFSO (see para 25 for other ISD participants). 
 
3. (SBU) The ISD opened with warm welcomes by DG Colasanti and 
Ambassador Gross, who stressed the utility and collegiality of the 
ISD over the past few years.  They noted that this will be their 
penultimate meeting as both will depart their posts in early 2009, 
with the changeovers of the U.S. administration and the expiry of 
Colasanti's term of office. 
 
4. (SBU) Lucy Sioli, of DG INFSO, offered a snapshot of EU ICT 
developments, noting broadband coverage now reaches 18.2 percent of 
the EU population (90 million lines), with a range of 7-37 percent 
penetration across the 27 member states.  She said Commission ICT 
strategies are a key part of the broader EU Lisbon Strategy for jobs 
and growth, since ICT generates half of European productivity 
growth.  She added that rising EU-wide competition has sped 
broadband growth, cut incumbent market shares to 46 percent, and 
reined in prices.  She noted, however, that average EU broadband 
speeds are slow compared to Asia and the U.S. 
 
5. (SBU) Helen Domenici of FCC reviewed how cable and DSL provider 
competition has driven U.S. broadband growth.  She said that in 
2006, there were 172 million users online in the U.S., with 82.5 
million high-speed lines.  Now, she said, 99 percent of the U.S. 
population lives in areas served by broadband.  She emphasized FCC's 
role in taking deregulatory steps to promote ICT development. 
Ambassador Gross added that industry estimates there are 250 million 
U.S. mobile subscribers as of late 2007. 
 
COMMISSION DISCUSSES TELECOMS REFORM PACKAGE 
-------------------------------------------- 
 
6. (SBU) Peter Scott of DG INFSO's policy office outlined Commission 
goals for the major telecom reform package proposed on November 13 
(reftel).  He said this has four aims, to: 1) enhance the rights of 
EU consumers, 2) boost the powers of national ICT regulators, 3) 
promote the wireless economy, and 4) strengthen the EU internal 
market.  He said specific goals include plans to increase network 
security and data privacy; proposals to ensure independence of 
national regulators and back their use of functional separation of 
telecom network and service providers as a last resort to promote 
competition; streamlining of EU spectrum management; and 
establishment of a new EU telecom market authority, an advisory body 
to the Commission.  Colasanti stressed that the media has 
 
BRUSSELS 00003509  002 OF 005 
 
 
over-dramatized the Commission's unbundling proposal.  Under current 
EU law, regulators are already free to pursue unbundling to promote 
competition.  (Note: only the UK has done so to date.  End note.) 
The new proposal makes this an explicit option for regulators, and 
establishes a Commission review process for this, in part to provide 
political cover to member states that wish to encourage national 
parliaments to adopt legislation allowing it (he cited Italy as an 
example). 
 
7. (SBU) Scott acknowledged political controversy over several 
proposals (reftel), but outlined Commission plans to seek EU 
parliamentary and Council approval of the package by early 2009.  He 
said this would then take 12-18 months to transpose into national 
legislation across EU member states, meaning it could take effect by 
late 2010 at the earliest.  DG Colasanti stressed that if there is 
no political agreement on the package by March, 2009, in advance of 
mid-2009 EU parliamentary elections, this would mean a "serious 
problem" and the package's likely delay until taken up by a new 
Commission in 2010. 
 
8. (SBU) Scott reviewed the Commission's November 13 Recommendation 
on Relevant Markets, which immediately decreases from 18 to 7 the 
number of telecom markets national regulators should review.  This 
reduction of relevant markets recognizes healthy competition in 
those that have been taken off the list.  Colasanti said the telecom 
authority could be established once there is EU political agreement 
on the package, speculating it could be running by 2011.  He 
admitted that the Commission expects the authority would assume all 
the functions of an EU-wide regulatory authority over 15-20 years. 
 
 
CONTROVERSY OVER MOBILE TV STANDARDS 
------------------------------------ 
 
9. (SBU) Beatrice Covassi of DG INFSO said that promotion of mobile 
broadcasting throughout the EU is high on InfoSociety Commissioner 
Reding's agenda.  Covassi said that to advance this goal DG INFSO is 
working on three fronts: 1) technical - the DG completed an impact 
assessment identifying the DVB-H standard as the "best candidate" 
for EU terrestrial mobile broadcasting; 2) regulatory - the 
Commission is looking at best practices, and is adding DVB-H to the 
list of official EU standards (meaning strong encouragement to 
member states to use this standard); and 3) spectrum - DG INFSO is 
encouraging member states to make spectrum available for mobile 
broadcasting, as part of the larger spectrum harmonization effort. 
 
 
10. (SBU) When questioned, Covassi defended Commissioner Reding's 
push to back the DVB-H standard.  (Note: Intel and some other U.S. 
firms are working with this technology, while Qualcomm supports 
MediaFlo, a rival standard.  End note).  Covassi acknowledged that 
Reding's push contradicts the Commission's stated support for 
technology neutrality, but said that 19 member states have already 
experimented with DVB-H, with eight more planning efforts next year 
- therefore claiming this is already a de-facto standard.  She 
explained that the Commission hopes industry will move to adopt 
DVB-H more formally, but said that if the Commission decides there 
"is not sufficient encouragement," it could act to make DVB-H the 
mandatory standard for mobile broadcasting. 
 
11. (SBU) Covassi asserted that conclusions from the November 29-30 
EU Member State Transport, Communications and Energy Council give 
the Commission latitude to continue with its plans for DVB-H. 
(Comment.  The Council conclusions actually just "take note" of 
rather than support the Commission plan to push DVB-H, and we have 
heard that most member states opposed Commission mandating of the 
standard.  We also understand that many in DG INFSO, even including 
DG Colasanti, oppose any mandating of the standard, but it is a 
personal goal of Commissioner Reding.  Industry is strongly opposed 
to mandating a standard.  Commissioner Reding will clearly face 
difficulty in pushing for formal action next year if she seeks to 
mandate DVB-H.  End comment.) 
 
12. (SBU) Domenici of FCC explained how industry leads standards 
development in the U.S., and said no mobile standard has been agreed 
upon as of yet.  Spectrum allocation for this will be market-driven, 
she noted.  Ambassador Gross added that there will be many platforms 
and systems for mobile broadcasting in the U.S. for some time.  This 
 
BRUSSELS 00003509  003 OF 005 
 
 
"will be a mess for awhile," he said, but noted that competition 
provides consumers with more and better options. 
 
COMMITMENT TO DEEPER RFID COOPERATION 
------------------------------------- 
 
13. (SBU) Gerald Santucci, who leads DG INFSO efforts on Radio 
Frequency Identification Technologies (RFID), updated the group on 
the U.S.-EU RFID dialogue over the last two years.  Santucci 
described how the identification of RFIDs as a priority area for 
cooperation as part of a U.S.-EU innovation "lighthouse" project 
under the Transatlantic Economic Framework (established at the 2007 
U.S.-EU Summit) offers new opportunities for progress.  He 
highlighted potential pilot projects that DG INFSO and the U.S. RFID 
interagency working group are considering for work in 2008. 
Projects could focus on privacy, security, postal services, 
pharmaceutical or consumer product traceability, healthcare, or 
other areas.  (Note: DG INFSO and the U.S. interagency seek to 
identify specific projects in these areas by early 2008.  End note). 
 
 
14. (SBU) Santucci walked through the Commission's RFID "roadmap" 
for 2008, which features: a public-private workshop in February, a 
Zurich conference on the "Internet of Things" (involving linking 
RFID-tagged objects to the internet) in March; a Commission 
Recommendation on RFID privacy and security (likely in May); a RFID 
discussion at the Seoul OECD ministerial in June; a possible RFID 
conference in the second half of 2008 under the French EU 
Presidency; and an EU Communication in late 2008 on the Internet of 
Things.  He said the public-private RFID expert group currently 
advising the Commission will meet throughout the year.  (Note: this 
advisory group contains no U.S. companies, despite several 
association requests that U.S. firms be included.  End note). 
 
OTHER REGULATORY AND POLICY ISSUES 
---------------------------------- 
 
15. (SBU) Much of the remainder of the day was taken up by 
presentations on other regulatory and policy issues.  Paul Timmers 
of DG INFSO described Commission efforts to expand e-Accessibility 
across the EU, particularly for the elderly and disabled.  He noted 
the Commission is preparing a legislative approach to the issue. 
Ambassador Gross responded that the U.S. seeks to build on existing 
U.S. legislation requiring e-accessibility. 
 
16. (SBU) Stephen Banable of DG INFSO outlined EU experience with 
the new Regulation cutting EU mobile roaming fees.  He said the 
Regulation was motivated by a DG Competition (DG COMP) study showing 
the "glaring disconnect" between roaming prices and costs across the 
EU, including a 70 percent profit margin for providers.  He reviewed 
the year-long process to prepare the Regulation, and said that since 
it took effect September 30, consumers have seen a 60 percent drop 
in roaming fees.  Ambassador Gross noted that, in contrast to the 
EU, intense market competition and natural market evolution moved 
U.S. providers toward a single national roaming rate. 
 
17. (SBU) Ruprecht Niepold of DG INFSO described Commission plans to 
streamline spectrum management across the EU, including plans to 
standardize use of spectrum freed by the EU switchover from analog 
to digital broadcasting (the so-called "digital dividend.")  He 
reviewed package proposals to promote coordinated decisions on 
spectrum across member states, and outlined harmonization measures 
already in place for key uses and frequencies, but said quicker, 
more efficient policies are needed.  Domenici of FCC and Fiona 
Alexander of NTIA described the joint FCC-NTIA spectrum management 
arrangement in the U.S., and previewed the 700 MHZ auction next year 
for spectrum that will be released by the analog-to-digital 
broadcasting switchover in the U.S. 
 
18. (SBU) Alexander also updated the EU officials on NTIA's work to 
increase the responsibility of the private Internet Corporation for 
Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) over management of the internet 
domain naming system (DNS).  She said that an 18-month review of 
NTIA's 2006 agreement on this with ICANN is upcoming, and welcomed 
EU input during the November-February public comment period.  (Note: 
the NTIA-ICANN relationship remains controversial in Europe with 
many EU officials having argued for an "internationalization" of DNS 
management during the 2005 World Summit for the Information Society. 
 
BRUSSELS 00003509  004 OF 005 
 
 
 End note). 
 
19. (SBU) Alexander reviewed U.S. plans to complete the switchover 
from analog to digital broadcasting, for which Congress set a date 
of February 2009.  She described the $990 million program, 
administered by NTIA, allowing consumers without cable or satellite 
to receive digital-analog converter boxes, so they can continue to 
receive TV reception after the switchover.  She noted that it is 
unclear how many consumers will participate in the program since a 
high percentage of Americans get TV via cable and therefore would 
not need a converter box. 
 
20. (SBU) Andreas Rover of DG INFSO responded with Commission plans 
for the EU switchover.  He explained that four member states are in 
the process of switching, six more will do so by 2010, 12 more by 
2012, and the last few by 2015.  He said that currently 19 member 
states have some digital services available, noting that strong 
consumer outreach by industry had made this change easier than 
expected. 
 
21. (SBU) The group then discussed Voice Over Internet Protocol 
(VoIP).  Alain Van Gaever of DG INFSO said the Commission's goal is 
to pursue a regulatory "light touch" over VoIP, concentrating on 
emergency services, consumer rights and provider obligations. 
Domenici responded that the FCC has determined that no economic 
regulation of VoIP is necessary, but has imposed social obligations 
on providers.  These include ensuring emergency services access, 
availability for wiretaps, compliance with privacy requirements, 
contribution to universal service funds, and others. 
 
AREAS FOR FURTHER COOPERATION 
----------------------------- 
 
22. (SBU) The group discussed the potential for greater U.S.-EU 
cooperation on e-Health and ICT research.  Ilias Iakovidis of DG 
INFSO noted EU research on developing online disease simulators and 
"virtual humans," describing a joint project with the U.S. National 
Institutes of Health (NIH) and Stanford University.  He said the 
U.S. and EU have e-Health action plans, with a goal of mutual 
recognition of certification of e-Health records.  He expects major 
progress in this area in 2008.  He noted, and Ambassador Gross 
agreed, that a potential obstacle to this is the lack in the U.S. 
(unlike in the EU) of financial support for small medical providers 
to switch from paper to electronic patient records. 
 
23. (SBU) Khalil Rouhana of DG INFSO then reviewed Commission ICT 
R&D programs, noting that the Commission will spend 9.1 billion 
euros on such efforts over the next seven years.  Projects are 
typically about nine million euros each, he added, involving 10-15 
partners.  He explained that around half of one percent of projects 
from 2004-07 have included U.S. participation.  He said the 
Commission hopes to deepen cooperation with the U.S. on R&D 
projects, via agreeing on joint areas of interest and pursuing 
separate research calls.  Tom Smitham, Head of Environment, Energy, 
Science and Technology at the U.S. Mission, stressed that a "bottom 
up" approach, directly between research agencies, has worked best. 
He noted the possibility for discussing ICT research at the next 
U.S.-EU Science and Technology Agreement meeting in February 2008. 
 
 
24. (SBU) The discussion ended with an extended exchange of shared 
frustrations about imposed standards in third countries and a pledge 
to work more closely to eliminate those barriers.  Ambassador Gross 
and DG Colasanti comparing their 2008 agendas at upcoming meetings 
including the APEC TelMin in Bangkok in April, the OECD meeting in 
Korea in June, WTSA, the Internet Governance Forum, the EU-Africa 
Summit, and other multilateral telecom fora.  They also compared how 
we can work better together to coordinate telecom assistance in 
developing countries, agreeing there are good possibilities with the 
Palestinian Authority and Africa. 
 
25. (U) In addition to the U.S. and EU delegation leaders, other 
U.S. ISD participants included: Fiona Alexander, Senior Policy 
Advisor in Commerce's National Telecommunications and Information 
Administration (NTIA); Ken Shagrin from USTR; Carl Willner, Attorney 
for Telecommunications and Media at the Department of Justice; Whit 
Witteman, Director for Europe, East Asia and Pacific in State EEB's 
Telecoms office; Tracey Weisler, FCC Advisor for Europe; EMin; 
 
BRUSSELS 00003509  005 OF 005 
 
 
EconOff (notetaker); and two locally engaged USEU staff.  Commission 
participants included Ruprecht Niepold, Head of Unit for Radio 
Spectrum Policy, DG INFSO; Peter Scott, Head of Unit for Policy 
Development, DG INFSO; Gerald Santucci, Head of Unit for Networked 
Enterprise and RFID, DG INFSO; Jean-Francois Soupizet, Head of Unit 
for International Relations, DG INFSO; Maria Carbone, Deputy Head of 
Unit for International Relations, DG INFSO; Anne Marie Vesdrevanis, 
International Relations, DG INFSO; Beatrice Covassi, Team Leader for 
Digital TV and Radio, DG INFSO; Tomas Adadia-Vicente, Policy Officer 
for the Commission's International Relations Directorate; Anna Snow, 
Senior Trade Advisor at the Commission Delegation to the U.S.; and 
other Commission officials. 
 
DIGITAL ECONOMY WORKSHOP (DEW) HIGHLIGHTS PRIVATE SECTOR 
DEVELOPMENTS, TELECOM PACKAGE 
--------------------------------------------- ---- 
 
26. (U) The European American Business Council (EABC) sponsored its 
Seventh Annual Digital Economy Workshop (DEW) December 3, 
immediately preceding the ISD.  The DEW brought the Commission and 
U.S. participants from the ISD together with industry to discuss key 
ICT developments.  Firms attending included British Telecom, Cisco, 
Dell, Deutsche Telekom, Ericsson, Intel, Microsoft, Motorola, Nokia, 
Nortel, NXP Semiconductors, Oracle, SAP, Telecom Italia, Telefonica 
and Verizon. 
 
27. (U) The DEW featured four panel discussions, on: 1) broadband 
deployment; 2) U.S. and EU spectrum policy; 3) IP enhanced services 
(VOIP, etc.); and 4) next generation Internet/Web 2.0.  The 
discussions produced lively exchanges, with big telecom incumbents 
(except for British Telecom) opposing Commission plans for 
functional separation and a new telecom market authority.  Many 
firms stressed the importance of rationalizing spectrum allocation 
across the EU to boosting future ICT investment in the EU.  Firms 
agreed that meeting privacy concerns and limiting regulation will be 
critical to the success of next generation internet services.  The 
dialogue between the public and private sectors at the DEW set a 
positive tone ensuring that the topics of importance to industry 
were dealt with during the ISD talks the following day. 
 
MURRAY