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Samishlol
27-03-2009, 10:10 AM
Using a mobile phone abroad in Europe looks set to get cheaper.

European MPs have brokered an agreement that will see the tariffs for making calls, sending text messages and browsing the web fall from July 2009.

All the prices that have been agreed are regarded as a ceiling and are the maximum that operators will be allowed to charge for the different services.

Before coming into force the tariffs must be approved by member states and the European parliament.

'Disappointment'

The agreement caps the cost of sending a text message at 11 cents (10p) throughout Europe.

Currently, texting tariffs vary widely across Europe. On average Europeans pay 29 cents to send a text and some pay as much as 80 cents.

Other data costs, charged to send e-mails or browse the web, will be regulated at the operator level. The agreement fixes how much a roaming operator can charge a customer's home operator.

From July 2009 the rate will be a maximum of 1 euro (92p) per megabyte and will fall to 50 cents (46p) from July 2011.

ROAMING COSTS - OUTGOING CALLS

43 cents per minute from July 2009
39 cents per minute from July 2010
35 cents per minute from July 2011


ROAMING COSTS - DATA

1 euro per megabyte from July 2009
80 cents per megabyte from July 2010
50 cents per megabyte from July 2011



In addition mobile owners will be able to agree a spending cap with their operators to ensure they do not rack up huge, unexpected bills while abroad. Customers will be warned when they have reached 80% of their spending limit.

The agreement also further pushes down the price of making a phone call while abroad. For each minute of conversation, customers should be charged no more than 43 cents from July 2009. Further falls will follow in 2010, and 2011.

Mobile operators will also have to change the way they charge customers for calls. Currently many round call durations up to the nearest minute before working out charges.

Under the proposed agreement operators will have to move to per-second call charges but can impose an initial minimum charging period 30 seconds in length.

The GSM Association said it was disappointed with some aspects of the deal which brought price caps in earlier and went further than had been initially suggested by the European Commission.

The agreement goes before the European Parliament's industry committee on 31 March and is expected to be voted on in a full session by 24 April.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/7965233.stm

I never really used my mobile abroad but my mum did, she used to go over on her contact by miles.

Titch
27-03-2009, 10:42 AM
Thank god! i can call gf when abroad without spending hundreds.

no waiii
27-03-2009, 01:17 PM
i doubt it would cost hundreds mabey a few extra pound :rolleyes:

Jordy
27-03-2009, 03:55 PM
i doubt it would cost hundreds mabey a few extra pound :rolleyes:Certainly not an extra few pound, atm it's something like 80p a minute or something equally ridiculous so it'd soon add up.

This is pathetic for British Citizens in comparison to Euro-Zone countries, we lose out massively as we're using Sterling and their mobile data prices use Euro's.

Atm 11 cents is roughly equivalant to 10p, 2 years ago it'd be about 6p :S

BowTies1
27-03-2009, 05:32 PM
would if this will include turkey cause i hate spending 40 p per text over there

no waiii
27-03-2009, 05:37 PM
well im only paying extra euros cause i dont use sterling... also no it wouldnt included turkey i dont think as there not EU

Captain
27-03-2009, 05:46 PM
would if this will include turkey cause i hate spending 40 p per text over there

As far as I know, Turkey is part of europe

no waiii
27-03-2009, 05:58 PM
As far as I know, Turkey is part of europe

but not the european union..

BeanEgg
27-03-2009, 05:59 PM
That's a start.
Look forward to using my phone during the summer when I'm abroad.

GommeInc
27-03-2009, 08:06 PM
but not the european union..
I thought they joined a while ago :S Or were said to at least, maybe that was Slovakia or another eastern european country...

This does seem like good news, the prices were a bit horrific.

no waiii
27-03-2009, 08:41 PM
i doubt it because they still have the death penalty and also there people need to apply for visa's to leave and go on hoildays and th army runs most of the country lol.

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