Directive 2008/63 - Competition in the markets in telecommunications terminal equipment (Codified version)

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1.

Current status

This directive has been published on June 21, 2008, entered into force on July 11, 2008 and should have been implemented in national regulation on August  8, 1995 at the latest.

2.

Key information

official title

Commission Directive 2008/63/EC of 20 June 2008 on competition in the markets in telecommunications terminal equipment (Codified version)
 
Legal instrument Directive
Number legal act Directive 2008/63
CELEX number i 32008L0063

3.

Key dates

Document 20-06-2008
Publication in Official Journal 21-06-2008; OJ L 162, 21.6.2008,Special edition in Croatian: Chapter 08 Volume 003
Effect 11-07-2008; Entry into force Date pub. + 20 See Art 9
End of validity 31-12-9999
Transposition 08-08-1995; At the latest See Art 8

4.

Legislative text

21.6.2008   

EN

Official Journal of the European Union

L 162/20

 

COMMISSION DIRECTIVE 2008/63/EC

of 20 June 2008

on competition in the markets in telecommunications terminal equipment

(Text with EEA relevance)

(Codified version)

THE COMMISSION OF THE EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES,

Having regard to the Treaty establishing the European Community, and in particular Article 86(3) thereof,

Whereas:

 

(1)

Commission Directive 88/301/EEC of 16 May 1988 on competition in the markets in telecommunications terminal equipment (1) has been substantially amended (2). In the interests of clarity and rationality the said Directive should be codified.

 

(2)

In all the Member States, telecommunications were, either wholly or partly, a State monopoly generally granted in the form of special or exclusive rights to one or more bodies responsible for providing and operating the network infrastructure and related services. Those rights, however, often used to go beyond the provision of network utilisation services and used to extend to the supply of user terminal equipment for connection to the network. The last decades have seen considerable technical developments in networks, and the pace of development has been especially striking in the area of terminal equipment.

 

(3)

Member States have, in response to technical and economic developments, reviewed their grant of special or exclusive rights in the telecommunications sector. The proliferation of types of terminal equipment and the possibility of the multiple use of terminals means that users must be allowed a free choice between the various types of equipment available if they are to benefit fully from the technological advances made in the sector.

 

(4)

The existence of exclusive rights has the effect of restricting the free movement of telecommunications terminal equipment either as regards the importation and marketing of terminal equipment (including satellite equipment), because certain products are not marketed, or as regards the connection, bringing into service or maintenance because, taking into account the characteristics of the market and in particular the diversity and technical nature of the products, a monopoly has no incentive to provide these services in relation to products which it has not marketed or imported, nor to align its prices on costs, since there is no threat of competition from new entrants on the market. Taking into account the fact that in most equipment markets there is typically a large range of telecommunication equipment, any special right which directly or indirectly limits the number of the undertakings authorised to import, market, connect, bring into service and maintain such equipment, is liable to have the same kind of effect as the grant of exclusive rights. Such exclusive or special rights constitute measures having equivalent effect to quantitative restrictions incompatible with Article 28 of the Treaty. Thus it is necessary to abolish all existing exclusive rights in the importation, marketing, connection, bringing into service and maintenance of terminal and telecommunications equipment, as well as those rights having comparable effects — that is to say, all special rights except those consisting in legal or regulatory advantages conferred on one or more undertakings and affecting only the ability of other undertakings to engage in any of the abovementioned activities in the same geographical area under substantially equivalent conditions.

 

(5)

The special or exclusive rights relating to terminal equipment are exercised in such a way as, in practice, to disadvantage equipment from other Member States, notably by preventing users from freely choosing the equipment that best suits their needs in terms of price and quality, regardless of its origin. The exercise of these rights is therefore not compatible with...


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This text has been adopted from EUR-Lex.

 

5.

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