Vodafone has shunned an initiative to help telecoms firms cut the costs of building the high-speed mobile networks needed for the next generation of phones.
Competing mobile phone firms are pushing to establish a shared infrastructure in order to cut costs and help reduce debt-mountains.
A proposed link-up, aimed at shaving 20-30% off the cost of setting up the new high speed mobile network, is expected to be unveiled in the coming weeks.
But D2 Vodafone, the German cellphone arm, is not willing to share its network with its competitors, even for the sake of cutting costs.
The huge cost of 3G licences – which will allow mobiles to provide access to the internet or near-TV quality video – is the key reason why telecoms stocks have plummeted on the world’s stock markets over the last eighteen months.
“Such a cooperation would be a brake on competition,” said D2 Vodafone boss Juergen von Kuczkowski at the Cebit trade fair in Germany. “We will fight against any cooperation that will depart from licence conditions,” he added.
Six mobile phone companies won 3G licences in Germany at a total cost of more than 50.5bn euros ($46.1bn, £30.4bn). It is the smaller companies that are suffering most from the huge capital expenditure demanded from the 3G auctions, whereas Vodafone has weathered the financial pressures better than some of its rivals.
And Vodafone may have already invested more in its network hardware than the smaller firms. If Vodafone agrees to share its network, it risks presenting its rivals with a better position in the market.
“From the moment when infrastructure is shared with another operator, competition ceases…. we do not want our competitiveness to be threatened,” said Mr von Kuczkowski.
But the co-operation package has been welcomed in principle by other leading companies such as Deutsche Telekom’s T-mobile subsidiary. And Viag Interkom, the German mobile phone group that is part owned by BT, has said that it hopes to reveal a cooperation proposal with its rivals in the coming weeks.
Deutsche Telekom paid the highest price for its licence, and was forced to absorb a 1.06bn euro loss in the last three months of last year. But Deutsche Telekom has also voiced doubts about whether regulatory hurdles can be overcome.
Sharing a network reduces competition and risks lifting the lid on consumer prices, therefore needing to win regulatory clearance. The regulator has already indicated that the operators should submit plans for cooperation. And some companies are also sceptical about whether the licence conditions can be changed retrospectively.
The six telecoms companies who paid up to buy the 3G licences in Germany are Deutsche Telekom, D2 Vodafone, E-plus (Hutchinson, KPN etc), Viag Interkom (BT etc), MobilCom (France Telecom etc) and Group 3G (Telefonica etc).