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EU Lowers 'Roaming' Cell Phone Costs
According
to a CNN report, cell phone users in the European Union will
enjoy significant savings when "roaming" within
the bloc's 27 member states from July 1 with the introduction
of new pricing rules.
Under the new system, the maximum cost of making calls between
two EU member states will be €0.43, down from €0.46,
while receiving calls now costs €0.19, down from €0.22.
Cellphone operators are also required to bill their customers
by the second after the first 30 seconds of a call, rather
than per minute -- a measure the Commission says will cut
phone bills by 20 percent.
Meanwhile the cost of sending SMS text messages and using
phones to connect to the Internet or download data, such as
e-mails or data, has fallen even more sharply.
The measures are designed to protect customers such as a
German man who downloaded a television program while visiting
France and was billed €46,000 by his cellphone operator.
The maximum cost of sending a text falls to €0.11 from
€0.29 while a €1 per megabyte price cap is imposed
on downloaded data, falling further to €0.50 by 2011.
At present, the EU average is €1.68 per megabyte.
Overall, the Commission claims the new roaming rules could
save users up to 60 percent on their bill.
In a statement, EU Telecoms Commissioner Viviane Reding said
the European Commission had put a stop to the "roaming
rip off."
Customers will also be able to choose a cut-off limit if
their bill reaches 50 euros, or set a higher limit.
Roaming cellphone charges have been falling in the European
Union since 2007 when the costs of making phone calls abroad
were on average four times more than domestic calls, according
to EU figures, reported CNN.
(July 1, 2009)
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