Europeans are hanging up on fixed line calls as they move more and more to
mobiles, according to a new report by analyst group
Analysys.
The report, titled The Acceleration of Fixed–Mobile Substitution in
Western Europe looks at the relentless progression to fixed–mobile
substitution (FMS) and the driving forces behind the change.
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"In many markets it looks as if fixed voice is going to suffer not the slow
and lingering decline many have predicted, but a rather rapid one," said Dr
Alastair Brydon, the report's co-author.
"At the current rate of traffic migration, 90 per cent of all voice minutes
in Finland will originate on mobile phones by 2008."
After several years of usage stagnation, the average outgoing mobile voice
usage per subscriber increased by 23 per cent during 2006 and five Western
European markets already saw more voice minutes originate on mobile networks
than on traditional voice and broadband networks combined.
Finland had the highest level of fixed–mobile traffic substitution in Western
Europe in the fourth quarter of 2006 when mobile-originated calls accounted for
67.6 per cent of all voice traffic.
However, not all countries are hooked on mobile phones as much as Finland –
for instance in Germany only 24.3 per cent of its voice traffic originated on
mobile phones in the fourth quarter of 2006. But even this is a 6.8 per cent
increase from the same period in 2005, marking the accelerated uptake of
fixed-mobile substitution.
"What is particularly worrying for fixed-line operations is not that FMS is
happening, but the pace at which it is happening," said Rupert Wood, principal
analyst at Analysys.
"Of course, fixed-network operators are looking to different sources of
revenue for growth, but the accelerating decline in core voice revenue is
damaging at a time when they are embarking on long and expensive next-generation
network re-engineering programmes."
VoIP appears to have little impact on the migration of voice traffic to
mobile networks and in fact the research indicates that it appears to release
consumer cash for additional spending on mobile services.
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