Complete our one minute customer care survey

2010 Ireland - Telecoms, IP Networks, Digital Media and Forecasts

Publication Overview

This report provides a comprehensive overview of trends and developments in Ireland’s telecommunications market. The report analyses the mobile, Internet, broadband, digital TV and converging media sectors. Subjects include:

  • Market and industry analyses, trends and developments;
  • Facts, figures and statistics;
  • Industry and regulatory issues;
  • Infrastructure;
  • Major players, revenues, subscribers, ARPU, MoU;
  • Internet, VoIP, IPTV;
  • Mobile voice and data markets;
  • Broadband (FttH, DSL, cable TV, wireless);
  • Convergence and digital media;
  • 3G subscriber and mobile ARPU forecasts to 2015;
  • Broadband market forecasts for selective years to 2020.

Researcher:- Henry Lancaster
Current publication date:- December 2010 (9th Edition)
Next publication date:- November 2011

Executive Summary

Ireland’s telecom sector crucial to economic recovery

BuddeComm’s annual publication, Ireland - Telecoms, IP Networks, Digital Media and Forecasts, provides a comprehensive overview of the trends and developments in the telecommunications and digital media markets in Ireland.

The poor economic climate has deeply affected the Irish telecom market since the second half of 2008. The government in 2009 underwrote some €50 billion worth of toxic debt accumulated by the three major banks. Mounting debts, compounded by low corporate tax and reduced income tax, obliged the government to accept up to €85 billion as a bailout from the EU and IMF in late 2010, while a four-year economic plan was devised to drive down the country’s deficit to 3% of GDP by the end of 2014 by cutting €15 billion off state spending. Ireland’s last three budgets have already cut public spending by up to €14 billion. The government’s indebtedness has made it difficult to honour its former pledges of public money to upgrade national telecoms networks, and so it has had to lean increasingly on the cash-strapped private sector.

The telecom sector has also been affected by reduced consumer spend on all but essential services. While mobile and broadband services are considered a ‘safe’ revenue stream for operators, there is little extravagance among consumers, and so operators have experienced lower revenue and smaller cash reserves to invest in networks, infrastructure and upgrades. Over the past six years or so changes in telecom sector revenue have mirrored economic output, and as the current recession has deepened both GNP and telecoms revenue have declined. Nevertheless, the contribution of the telecom sector to GDP has grown during the last two years, reaching about 2.5% by the second quarter of 2010, suggesting that telecoms is moderately healthier than other sectors of the economy.

Ireland’s mobile penetration is on a par with the EU average, having grown at one of the fastest rates in the EU in recent years. The country also has an above average level of data revenue as a percentage of total mobile revenue (at about 30%). The mobile market makes up about half of total telecom revenue. The proportion of the population with a mobile subscription overtook that with a fixed phone line at the end of 2004.

About a fifth of all households have no fixed-line telephony, while mobile originating minutes account for about half of all voice traffic. Although blended ARPU has continued to fall, it is as the second highest in the EU (marginally behind Switzerland), and some €12 higher than the EU average. ARPU is expected to rise from 2011 in response to increased data traffic outweighing a shift to prepaid usage among consumers.

The total number of broadband subscriptions continues to grow, though the rate of growth has slowed in recent quarters and is largely propped up by the mobile broadband sector. There were about 1.6 million subscriptions in Ireland at the end of 2010, representing a 5% growth year-on-year, while mobile broadband connections increased at about 33% in the year. DSL accounts for about 47% of all broadband subscribers, while the cable sector accounts for 11% and other platforms (fixed wireless, satellite and mobile broadband) the remainder.

Eircom’s dominance in the broadband market is gradually slipping, representing about 64% of subscriptions by the end of 2010. Greater efforts by the government and regulator have led to higher broadband penetration in Ireland, though the country still ranks near the bottom of OECD countries. In the EU it is ranked above only Greece. The slow process of local loop unbundling is a major reason for Ireland’s poor position: competitors to eircom provide only 34% of broadband lines, whereas in countries with the highest broadband penetration they have at least 50% of broadband lines.

Until 2005 broadband access was among the most expensive in the EU, with average prices about 35%-40% higher than in the UK. Prices have fallen substantially in recent years, redressing the balance, though Ireland remains comparatively expensive and data speeds remain comparatively low.

Key telecom parameters – 2009 – 2011

Sector

2009

2011 (e)

Broadband:

Fixed broadband subscribers (thousand)

865

1,030

Fixed broadband penetration rate

22.6%

25.4%

Mobile broadband subscribers (thousand)

410

660

Subscribers to telecoms services:

Fixed-line telephony (million)

1.95

1.8

Mobile phone (million)

5.03

5.0

Mobile SIM penetration (population)

110%

112%

(Source: BuddeComm)

Market highlights:

  • DSL is the principal broadband access technology, representing almost half of all fixed-line accesses, while cable accounts for only about 11%. The number of significant competitors remains small in this market, which the regulator needs to address in order to stimulate the provision of faster network speeds and cheaper prices for consumers.
  • The MVNO market remains underdeveloped. Tesco Mobile was the first to launch as an MVNO, in 2007. An Post (Postfone) and JustMobile (from late-2010) are the only other contenders to MNOs. This sector also needs to be encouraged if Ireland’s high mobile phone prices are to reach a par with the EU average. 3 Ireland is well positioned to host MVNOs since the extra bandwidth allocated to it was specifically intended to allow room for them on its network.
  • Data revenue as a proportion of total mobile revenue is among the highest in the EU, and should reach above 4% by 2012. MNOs have developed a range of business models to attract consumers and encourage high-end data use (other than SMS). Much of the current use of such services remains through consumer exploration and experimentation. LTE networks are not expected to become commercial until late 2011 or 2012.
  • There has been little commercial investment in fibre in Ireland, leaving the principal fibre infrastructure to lie in backhaul. Eircom estimated that the cost of upgrading its access network for FttC at the largest 65% of exchanges (covering about one million lines) would be between €400 million to €500 million, and that an FttH solution could cost above €2,000 per home in new build premises and €2,500 per home in existing properties. The company’s indebtedness has encouraged it to find no the business case to favour FttH, with the results that FttH networks are largely restricted to new-build developments. By 2012 there may still be fewer than 10,000 FttH subscribers in Ireland, representing less than 1% of all broadband subscribers.
  • The regulator’s final decision on ASO will seen the process completed in three phases during the first four months of 2012. Released spectrum has yet to be allocated, but is likely to be used for mobile broadband services, in common with developments elsewhere in Europe.
  • The chaotic DTTV market remains in limbo. The failure of Boxer (awarded three national DTTV multiplexes) as well as the One Vision consortium was compounded by the refusal of the third bidder for the DTTV service, the Easy TV consortium (comprising RTÉ and Liberty Global), to negotiate with the Broadcasting Authority of Ireland (BAI). The BAI has ruled out introducing commercial DTTV until after analogue TV services are switched off at the end of 2012, with services not to be launched until 2013. all three groups which contested the 2008 DTT contest have withdrawn from the process.

This report is essential reading for those needing high level strategic information and objective analysis on the telecom sector in Ireland. It provides further information on:

  • Market liberalisation and regulatory issues;
  • The impact of the global economic crisis;
  • Telecoms operators – privatisation, acquisitions, new licences;
  • Mobile data market developments in coming years in light of spectrum auctions and new license awards in 2010;
  • 3G developments, regulatory issues and technologies including HSPA and LTE;
  • Broadband migration to an FttH architecture;
  • Historical and current subscriber statistics and forecasts;
  • ARPU statistics and forecasts.

Data in this report is the latest available at the time of preparation and may not be for the current year.

Table of Contents

  • 1. Key Statistics
  • 2. Telecommunications Market
    • 2.1 Overview of Ireland’s telecom market
  • 3. Regulatory Environment
    • 3.1 History
    • 3.2 Revised NFR
    • 3.3 Regulatory authority
      • 3.3.1 Commission for Communications Regulation (ComReg)
    • 3.4 Telecom sector liberalisation in Ireland
      • 3.4.1 Privatisation of eircom
      • 3.4.2 Interconnect
      • 3.4.3 Access
      • 3.4.4 Fibre access
    • 3.5 Number Portability (NP)
    • 3.6 Carrier PreSelection (CPS)
  • 4. Fixed Network Market
    • 4.1 Overview
    • 4.2 Operator market shares
    • 4.3 Eircom
      • 4.3.1 Going into 2011
    • 4.4 BT Ireland
    • 4.5 Smart Telecom
    • 4.6 Tele2
    • 4.7 Other operators
  • 5. Telecommunications Infrastructure
    • 5.1 National telecom network
    • 5.2 Structural separation issues
    • 5.3 Next Generation Networks (NGNs)
    • 5.4 International
      • 5.4.1 Submarine cable networks
      • 5.4.2 Satellite networks
  • 6. Broadband Market
    • 6.1 Overview
      • 6.1.1 Broadband statistics
      • 6.1.2 National Development Plan to 2013
      • 6.1.3 Promoting broadband
      • 6.1.4 Government networks
      • 6.1.5 Other providers
      • 6.1.6 Regional infrastructure
      • 6.1.7 Wholesale bitstream
    • 6.2 Cable modems
    • 6.3 Asymmetrical Digital Subscriber Line (ADSL)
      • 6.3.1 Alternative operators
      • 6.3.2 ADSL2+
    • 6.4 Fibre-to-the-Home (FttH) networks
    • 6.5 Broadband Powerline (BPL)
    • 6.6 Mobile broadband
    • 6.7 Wireless broadband
      • 6.7.1 1.7GHz band
      • 6.7.2 10.5GHz band
      • 6.7.3 3.5GHz band
      • 6.7.4 Other spectrum
      • 6.7.5 Digiweb
      • 6.7.6 National Fixed Wireless Point to Multipoint Licences (FWPMA)
      • 6.7.7 Other developments
      • 6.7.8 Other bands
      • 6.7.9 WiFi
      • 6.7.10 Worldwide Interoperability of Microwave Access (WiMAX)
      • 6.7.11 WiFibre
      • 6.7.12 Internet via satellite
  • 7. Digital Media
    • 7.1 Convergence
      • 7.1.1 Key general trends
      • 7.1.2 Business models
      • 7.1.3 Regulatory issues
    • 7.2 Digital TV
      • 7.2.1 Overview and statistics
      • 7.2.2 Broadband TV (IPTV)
      • 7.2.3 Cable TV
      • 7.2.4 Satellite TV
      • 7.2.5 Digital Terrestrial TV (DTTV)
      • 7.2.6 Video-on-Demand (VoD)
      • 7.2.7 VoIP
      • 7.2.8 Digital cinema
      • 7.2.9 Interactive TV (iTV)
  • 8. Mobile Communications
    • 8.1 Overview of Ireland’s mobile market
      • 8.1.1 Mobile statistics
    • 8.2 Regulatory issues
      • 8.2.1 Spectrum regulations and spectrum auctions
      • 8.2.2 Roaming
      • 8.2.3 Mobile Number Portability (MNP)
      • 8.2.4 Mobile termination rates (MTRs)
      • 8.2.5 Wideband Digital Mobile Data Services (WDMDS)
    • 8.3 Mobile technologies
      • 8.3.1 Digital
      • 8.3.2 Third Generation (3G) mobile
    • 8.4 Major mobile operators
      • 8.4.1 Vodafone Ireland
      • 8.4.2 O2 Ireland
      • 8.4.3 Meteor Mobile
      • 8.4.4 Eircom Mobile
      • 8.4.5 3 Ireland
      • 8.4.6 MVNOs
    • 8.5 Mobile voice services
      • 8.5.1 Prepaid
    • 8.6 Mobile Messaging
      • 8.6.1 Short Message Service (SMS)
      • 8.6.2 Multimedia Messaging Service (MMS)
    • 8.7 Mobile data services
      • 8.7.1 General Packet Radio Service (GPRS)
      • 8.7.2 High-Speed Circuit-Switched Data (HSCSD)
      • 8.7.3 Enhanced Data for GSM Evolution (EDGE)
      • 8.7.4 High-Speed Packet Access (HSPA)
      • 8.7.5 Enhanced High Speed Packet Access (HSPA+)
      • 8.7.6 Long-term Evolution (LTE)
      • 8.7.7 i-mode
      • 8.7.8 iPhone
      • 8.7.9 BlackBerry
    • 8.8 Mobile applications
      • 8.8.1 Overview
      • 8.8.2 Mobile TV
  • 9. Forecasts
    • 9.1 Forecast broadband subscribers
      • 9.1.1 Scenario 1 – higher broadband subscriber growth
      • 9.1.2 Scenario 2 – lower broadband subscriber growth
    • 9.2 Forecasts – mobile ARPU – 2009 - 2010; 2015
    • 9.3 Forecasts – UMTS subscribers – 2009 - 2010; 2015
  • 10. Glossary of Abbreviations
  • Table 1 – Country statistics Ireland – 2010
  • Table 2 – Telecom revenue and investment statistics – H1 2010
  • Table 3 – Telephone network statistics – June 2010
  • Table 4 – Internet user statistics – June 2010
  • Table 5 – Broadband statistics – June 2010
  • Table 6 – Mobile statistics – June 2010
  • Table 7 – National telecommunications authority
  • Table 8 – Market revenue by fixed, mobile and broadcasting sectors – H1 2010
  • Table 9 – LLU, shared access price – connection, monthly rental (€) – 2007 - 2010
  • Table 10 – Fixed-line and mobile voice traffic in minutes – 2008 - 2010
  • Table 11 – Proportion of fixed-line revenue by service – 2004 - 2010
  • Table 12 – Fixed-line share of revenue by operator (eircom and altnets) – Q2 2010
  • Table 13 – BT Ireland broadband subscribers – 2006 - 2009
  • Table 14 – BT Ireland revenue – 2008 - 2010
  • Table 15 – Smart Telecom financial data (historic) – 2003 - 2005
  • Table 16 – Market share of fixed broadband subscriptions by operator – June 2010
  • Table 17 – Proportion of residential, business broadband connections by data speed – 2008 - 2010
  • Table 18 – UPC Ireland revenue – 2006 - 2009
  • Table 19 – UPC Ireland revenue – 2006 - 2009
  • Table 20 – BSkyB satellite TV subscribers – 2003 - 2008
  • Table 21 – Mobile operators, subscribers and annual change – June 2010
  • Table 22 – MTRs by operator – 2010 - 2012
  • Table 23 – Vodafone ARPU: blended, prepaid and contract – 2006 - 2008
  • Table 24 – Meteor Mobile subscribers – 2006 - 2010
  • Table 25 – Prepaid versus postpaid share of subscribers – 2000 - 2011
  • Table 26 – Proportion of prepaid subscribers by operator – 2006 - 2010
  • Chart 1 – Market revenue share by fixed, mobile and broadcasting sectors – 2002 - 2010
  • Chart 2 – Broadband and mobile subscribers – 2008 - 2010
  • Chart 3 - Unbundled loops and access lines – 2005 - 2010
  • Chart 4 – eircom access channels: PSTN, ISDN, ADSL – 2007 - 2010
  • Chart 5 – Indirect access lines: CPS and WLR – 2006 - 2010
  • Chart 6 – Fixed-line and mobile voice traffic in minutes – 2008 - 2010
  • Chart 7 – Eircom access channels – 2006 - 2010
  • Chart 8 – Eircom financial data (historic) – 2001 - 2007
  • Chart 9 - Eircom financial data (year to June) – 2009 - 2010
  • Chart 10 - Eircom revenue by sector (year to June) – 2009 - 2010
  • Chart 11 – Fixed lines in service and teledensity – 1999 - 2011
  • Chart 12 – Broadband penetration by technology – 2006 - 2011
  • Chart 13 – Dial-up Internet subscribers – 2005 – 2011
  • Chart 14 – Total Internet users – 2005 - 2010
  • Chart 15 – Total broadband subscribers by access type – 2002 - 2011
  • Chart 16 – Share of broadband subscribers by platform – 2007 - 2010
  • Chart 17 – Average proportion of broadband connections by data speed – 2009 - 2010
  • Chart 18 – UPC Ireland broadband, phone subscribers – 2006 - 2010
  • Chart 19 – DSL access provision by type and operator – 2002 – 2010
  • Chart 20 – Eircom’s ADSL lines – 2005 - 2010
  • Chart 21 – Mobile broadband subscribers – 2006 - 2011
  • Chart 22 – Mobile broadband share of all broadband subscribers – 2007 - 2011
  • Chart 23 – Wireless broadband subscribers – 2005 - 2011
  • Chart 24 – Wireless hotspots and access points – 2007 - 2010
  • Chart 25 – Proportion of pay TV and FTA households – 2008 - 2010
  • Chart 26 – Proportion of digital and analogue reception – 2008 - 2010
  • Chart 27 – TV households by type (cable, satellite, pay) – 2006 - 2011
  • Chart 28 – Uptake of broadcasting services, proportion of total – 2002 - 2011
  • Chart 29 – Digital TV: cable and satellite market share – 2004 - 2011
  • Chart 30 – Digital pay TV subscribers as percentage of pay TV – 2004 - 2011
  • Chart 31 – Cable TV subscribers and penetration rate – 2000 - 2011; 2015
  • Chart 32 – Digital cable TV subscribers – 2005 - 2011
  • Chart 33 – UPC Ireland cable TV subscribers – 2006 - 2010
  • Chart 34 – Satellite TV subscribers and home penetration – 2000 – 2011; 2015
  • Chart 35 – Operator blended ARPU – 2005 - 2011
  • Chart 36 – Mobile subscribers and penetration rate – 1999 - 2011
  • Chart 37 – Mobile market revenue, voice and data – 2006 - 2011
  • Chart 38 – Mobile share of subscribers by operator – 2006 - 2010
  • Chart 39 – Mobile share of revenue by operator – 2006 - 2010
  • Chart 40 - European roaming charges – 2007 - 2011
  • Chart 41 – Mobile numbers ported (cumulative) – 2003 - 2010
  • Chart 42 – Vodafone subscribers – 2006 - 2010
  • Chart 43 – O2 mobile financial data – 2007 - 2010
  • Chart 44 – O2 mobile data statistics – 2007 – 2010
  • Chart 45 – O2 annualised ARPU, blended, prepaid and contract – 2006 - 2010
  • Chart 46 – O2 subscribers – 2007 - 2010
  • Chart 47 – Meteor Mobile services revenue – 2009 - 2010
  • Chart 48 – Meteor Mobile ARPU – 2006 - 2010
  • Chart 49 – 3 Ireland subscribers – 2006 - 2010
  • Chart 50 – Mobile voice minutes – 2005 - 2011
  • Chart 51 – SMS messages sent – 2000 - 2011
  • Chart 52 – MMS messages sent – 2005 - 2011
  • Chart 53 – Mobile data as proportion of total revenue – 2006 - 2010
  • Chart 54 – Mobile broadband subscribers – 2007 – 2011
  • Chart 55 – HSPA penetration rate – 2007 - 2011
  • Chart 56 – Forecast fixed-line broadband subscribers – higher market growth scenario– 2010 - 2012; 2020
  • Chart 57 – Forecast fixed-line broadband penetration – higher market growth scenario– 2010 - 2012; 2020
  • Chart 58 – Forecast fixed-line broadband subscribers – lower market growth scenario – 2010 - 2012; 2020
  • Chart 59 – Forecast fixed-line broadband penetration – lower market growth scenario – 2010 - 2012; 2020
  • Chart 60 – Forecast mobile ARPU – 2005 - 2010; 2015
  • Chart 61 – Forecast UMTS subscribers – 2006 - 2010; 2015
  • Exhibit 1 – EU – The New Regulatory Framework (NRF)
  • Exhibit 2 – Access and the local loop
  • Exhibit 3 – Overview of media convergence
  • Exhibit 4 – 3G licence results – June 2002
  • Exhibit 5 – WDMDS licences: operators, spectrum and fees – 2005

Related Reports

Annual Publication profile

Single-User PDF Licence: US$250.00EX GST
Member Discounts Apply
Purchase
License Information

Your Cart

Your Cart is empty

Purchase with Confidence

"We wanted to extend our Com World Series of telecoms industry events to the South Pacific region and we were in urgent need of a partner in the region who could assist us with confirming the involvement of governments, telcos and more. Paul Budde and his team executed this perfectly. Paul also provided us with very high quality reports on every aspect of the project, including an amazingly thorough and actionable report on the conference presentations and discussion."

Joe Willcox, Commercial Content Director, Emap Connect, Emap

» More from our customers..

Special Offers

More than 4,000 customers from 140 countries utilise BuddeComm Research

Are you interested in BuddeComm's Consulting Services ?

Quick Search

News & Views

Have the latest telecommunications industry news delivered to your inbox by subscribing to Paul's FREE weekly News & Views.

Contact us

Email     pbc@budde.com.au

Copyright © 2012 Paul Budde Communication Pty Ltd. All rights reserved. All trademarks and copyrights are the property of their respective holders. Design by Arcaeda | Hosted by Ipera