The European Commission has followed the lead set by Ofcom last month and
introduced rules for harmonising the use of
mobile
phones in aircraft.
However, the technical and licensing rules govern flights only within EU
airspace. Unless neighbouring territories fall into line with the Commission,
airlines will not be able to offer the service on flights outside the EU.
Mobile carriers and airlines have been lobbying hard for the Commission to
approve in-flight calls as a means to generate extra revenue.
Until recently, aviation authorities worldwide have maintained that mobile
phone signals from aircraft to conventional cellular base stations on the ground
interfere with aircraft navigation and flight-control systems.
But the development of miniature cellular base stations known as picocells
means that an aircraft can be fitted with its own base station and use a
satellite link for connecting calls with the cellular network, reducing the
likelihood of interference.
Some airlines, such as Air France and Qantas, have already run pilot
programmes to enable in-flight calls from passengers' mobiles.
The inherent international nature of flight means EU-wide rules were a
necessity, according to the Commission.
Pricing of calls from aircraft is not covered by the EU rules and will be
left to operators.
However, the Commission has taken a strong interest in
lowering
roaming charges among EU member countries, and a bluntly worded statement
from EU Telecoms Commissioner Viviane Reding warned operators not to gouge
in-flight callers.
"We expect operators to be transparent and innovative in their price
offerings," she said. "If consumers receive shock phone bills, the service will
not take-off."
Reding also called on airlines to "create the right conditions onboard
aircraft to ensure that those who want to use in-flight communication services
do not disturb other passengers".
Given the tightly packed layout of most commercial aircraft, this may prove a
challenge. Limiting mobile users to data only, i.e. SMS and internet access, has
been suggested as a solution.
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