French Telcos to Spend $3.7 Billion on Network Improvements

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France’s mobile telephone operators will spend more than $3.7 billion (US) on developing a 4G network with no coverage gaps by 2020, a government minister said.

Each of the major operators would install 5,000 masts and antennas and jointly ensure network coverage along 30,000 km (19,000 miles) of rail tracks, Julien Denormandie, junior minister for territorial cohesion, told the Journal du Dimanche.

The finance ministry said Orange (ORAN.PA), formerly the state-owned monopoly France Telecom, SFR (ATCA.AS), Bouygues Telecom (BOUY.PA), and Iliad’s (ILD.PA) Free Mobile have all under-invested in France’s mobile network during the past 15 years.  Denormandie said that in return for the increased investment, the government would extend the telecoms companies’ spectrum licences instead of holding a new auction, effectively giving up future income. “Not a single cent will come from the budget!” he added.

Mobile users often complain that the French network can seem inferior to coverage in some African countries where telecom companies bypassed fixed lines and invested heavily in mobile, Reuters reported. As of July 2017, the 4G networks of SFR, Bouygues Telecom, Orange and Free Mobile covered 74 percent, 70 percent, 69 percent and 47 percent of the population respectively in low density zones, says the telecoms’ regulator Arcep.

Denormandie said the three-year rollout plan would bring 4G coverage to more than 10,000 towns and villages currently served by either 2G or 3G networks, according to Reuters.

January 17, 2018

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