By David Meyer, 9 May 2006 17:50
NEWS
UK mobile operators O2 and Orange are set to follow competitors T-Mobile and Vodafone by cutting their mobile roaming rates.
O2, which was recently bought by Spain's Telefonica, is putting the final touches on a new charging plan that will be announced in two to three weeks' time. O2 is also keen to stress the move was unrelated to the threat of regulation by the European Commission.
A spokesman said on Tuesday: "We started work prior to [EU commissioner for information society and media] Viviane Reding making her announcement last month.
"At the beginning of the year, with the Telefonica deal, we said one of the immediate benefits that our customers would see was an improvement in roaming prices now we're part of a wider global company. This is something that comes out of the Telefonica deal."
Vodafone and T-Mobile both cut their roaming rates on Monday.
Last week Orange introduced new roaming packages which it says make it "easier than ever for customers to predict their costs when roaming". In practice, this involves pre-purchasing a bundle of 50 incoming or outgoing call minutes for £25.
While the costs of the bundle are certainly transparent and predictable, they mean the customer must use all the minutes in the package in order to gain the 28 per cent reduction on normal roaming costs. Even then, that figure still falls short of Reding's stated principle, that "a mobile phone customer should not be charged a higher tariff just because he is travelling abroad".
A spokesperson for Orange said that no further roaming price reductions were being planned, although the France Telecom subsidiary constantly updates its offers.
David Meyer writes for ZDNet UK

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1. Michael Dixon.
Not just rip-off Britain, but rip-off Britons.
Still not good enough, but perhaps most people are still too lazy to use the (very much) cheaper alternatives. And without sacrificing quality...