Joint EU and National Telecom Sector Statement on “Fair Contribution”

Brussels, 18 July 2022 – EU and national associations AOMR (RO), APMS (CZ), AssoTelecomunicazioni (IT), ATI (BG), DigitalES (SP), ETNO (EU), Fédération Française des Télécoms (FR), GSMA Europe (EU) and and *Internetoffensive Österreich (Austria)* released the following Joint Statement at the start of the Czech Presidency of the EU:

Our Associations represent the companies bringing ultrafast digital connectivity to European citizens, across Member States. We are proud of the EU internet ecosystem, of the vibrant community of ICT companies that populate it, and of the hard work that small and big telecom companies do every day to reach every European household across 27 Member States.

We are committed to working tirelessly to achieve the ambitious EU Digital Decade Targets, which include the roll-out of “gigabit connectivity for everyone and 5G everywhere by 2030”. In addition, our member companies are proactively working to support the EU Green Deal objectives, which require full digitalization in order to achieve net zero emissions. These targets are essential in empowering our societies, boosting our national economies and underpinning the twin green-digital transition.

European telecom operators are firmly committed to reach such targets, but their full and speedy achievement across all 27 Member States requires that the responsibility is shared collectively by the entire digital ecosystem.

In this context, we strongly support the EU Declaration on Digital Rights and Principles for the Digital Decade, which calls for establishing relevant frameworks to ensure a “fair and proportionate contribution” of all players. Similarly, we support the public debate launched by Executive Vice-president Vestager and Commissioner Breton in May 2022 for an open discussion on whether all players currently contribute fairly to the development of digital network infrastructures.

Our Associations ask European policymakers to promote swift policy intervention and to help ensure that big tech companies contribute their fair share to growing the EU Internet ecosystem, especially in the context of continuous data traffic increases. All European network operators investing in gigabit networks – no matter whether alternative or traditional, small or big – should be able to rely on a fair and proportionate contribution by big tech companies to the network costs they generate with their traffic.

Such action can – and should – be achieved in full respect of Europe’s EU Open Internet principles. We expect it to strongly benefit users via network upgrades, to reinforce internet infrastructure and to be fully compatible with unrestricted access to all lawful content and applications on the internet.

We therefore call on Ministers as well as EU policymakers to stand firm in supporting and advancing the principle of “fair and proportionate contribution” and we believe it will be instrumental in sustaining and growing the EU internet ecosystem.

Media inquiries:
AOMR – Mihai Constantin ([email protected])
APMS – Jiří Grund ([email protected])
AssoTelecomunicazioni – Matteo Cecconi ([email protected])
ATI  – Andreana Atanasova ([email protected])
DigitalES – Elena Arrieta ([email protected]) +34 661 930 285
ETNO – Alessandro Gropelli ([email protected]); Gabriel Daia ([email protected])
Fédération Française des Télécoms – Alice Provost ([email protected])
GSMA Europe – Michael Witts ([email protected])
*Internetoffensive Österreich – Sandra Edelbacher ([email protected])
*Joined in September 2022

For more information please contact:

Lotte Abildgaard

Director Public Policy, Europe , GSMA

Lotte leads the public policy initiatives on the regulatory files in GSMA Europe, coordinating activities to advance the members’ positions on a range of topics including net neutrality, roaming, cyber security and the wider debate on a proportionate framework to sustain long term investments in connectivity across Europe.

Lotte has broad experiences from the telecommunications sector working with regulators and policymakers at national, European and international level. She was heading up Telenor’s Representative Office for 6 years where she positioned Telenor in various EU policy debates besides focusing on international relations between the EU and Asia. She also spent 3 years at Telenor’s headquarter in Oslo supporting Telenor Group in its relationship with international stakeholders.

Before joining GSMA’s Brussels Office, Lotte was employed by a large Danish bank where she implemented new financial regulation as a senior project manager.

Lotte is a Danish native and holds a master of agricultural economics from University of Copenhagen.

[email protected]