Technology & Innovation

The digital single market

July 31, 2014

Global

July 31, 2014

Global
Michel Combes

Chief executive officer

Michel Combes became Chief Executive Officer of Alcatel-Lucent in  April 1 2013,  with more than 20 years of experience in the telecommunications sector, and a strong international background.  His appointment to Alcatel-Lucent follows four years at the global mobile communications operator Vodafone plc, where he became CEO  Europe Region in October 2008, and was subsequently appointed to the Vodafone board in June 2009. As CEO of Vodafone Europe, Combes led the group’s recovery in the region.

Interview with Michel Combes, CEO of Alcatel-Lucent, about the potential for a common market for telecommunications in Europe

Economist Intelligence Unit: Do you think Europe needs a digital single market (DSM)?

Michel Combes, Alcatel-Lucent: A DSM could foster investment and spark new dynamism and innovation in the telecoms sector. However, some major issues need to be addressed. First, we need to end a competition model that is only based on reducing prices in the short term and turn to a model based on competitiveness and innovation. European operator revenues are expected to decline in the years ahead. It will therefore be increasingly difficult for operators to take risks or invest, while networks and services are ever more necessary for our society. Second, Europe must harmonise spectrum allocation procedures in order to accelerate the rollout of pan-European mobile services. Third, Europe needs shared and efficient policies on net neutrality (a guarantee that information sent over broadband networks is without prejudice or priority) to allow operators to differentiate themselves and revive investment. Unfortunately, net neutrality provisions recently adopted by the European Parliament fall short of industry expectations.

What infrastructure innovations must the telecoms sector implement to create a DSM?

In 2014 the European telecoms industry has a critical need for a strategy that is more favourable to investment - particularly for latest-generation access technologies. Europe must decide to embark fully on a race for ultra-broadband fixed and mobile infrastructures. Although it has led the rollout of 2G and 3G services well before the US or Asia, Europe lags behind regarding 4G and ultra-broadband. It must fully embrace technologies based on Internet Protocol (IP), accelerate the pace of transformation of telecoms networks and stimulate the rollout of cloud-based services, which will also enable other sectors (such as energy and transport) to realise efficiency gains and establish new business models.

Will this development facilitate the growth of European cloud infrastructure and a shift to smaller businesses utilising cloud-based services?

The uptake of cloud still faces challenges that hold back business adoption: how are the data protected? How do I transfer my data? What if my cloud provider goes bankrupt? Beyond upgrading access infrastructure, the time has come for Europe to move to IP networks, supported by what the industry calls "virtualised" infrastructures based on cloud technology. The European Commission has launched initiatives to ensure cloud interoperability standards, certification of cloud providers and safe and fair contract terms.  Harmonisation in data-protection and cyber-security rules is essential as well. Trade and online transactions need to be enabled without the complications of 28 sets of national rules.

According to a 2013 report by the European Telecommunications Network Operators Association, revenues of the European telecoms sector are expected to contract over the next decade by up to 2% a year. Would a unified market create growth and enable competition with the telecoms sector in the US?

Owing to current regulation and policy the European telecoms sector is highly fragmented, with 120 operators subject to rules and procedures that change from one country to another. In both the US and China there are three or four incumbents leading the game and offering a diverse range of services.

To compete with the US, Europe's response should be regulatory standardisation with a DSM, while allowing the consolidation of networks through sharing agreements or mergers. To keep up with the pace of the European digital agenda (an EU initiative to facilitate trade and collaboration across Europe using digital technology), European players should favour competition in a framework where consumers are able to make clear choices in terms of connection quality, speed and capacity - not just retail price.

It has been claimed that last year's treaty to establish a Unified Patent Court (UPC) will allow businesses to protect and defend their innovations across Europe through a single patent application. Do you think this kind of integration is beneficial and what does it imply for the DSM?

Yes, the creation of the UPC (a one-patent jurisdiction for all EU countries) will be beneficial for innovative companies, in that it introduces a fair enforcement of patent rights across Europe. With the establishment of the UPC companies will have a single court instead of multiple courts across Europe where they can apply for the enforcement of the Unitary Patent, which ultimately will facilitate the implementation of a DSM in Europe. How beneficial the UPC will be though depends on how expensive it is to litigate there and the quality of its decisions.

This interview is part of a series managed by the Economist Intelligence Unit for HSBC Commercial Banking. Visit HSBC Global Connections for more insight on international business.

Enjoy in-depth insights and expert analysis - subscribe to our Perspectives newsletter, delivered every week