Complete our one minute customer care survey

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

Publication Overview

This annual report provides a comprehensive overview of trends and developments in Spain’s telecommunications market. The report analyses trends and developments in telecommunications, mobile, Internet, broadband, digital TV and converging media including VoIP, VoD and IPTV developments. 

Subjects include:

  • Key statistics;
  • Market and industry overviews;
  • Industry and regulatory issues;
  • Major players (fixed, mobile and broadband);
  • Mobile voice and data markets;
  • Internet and broadband development;
  • Convergence (voice/data, fixed/wireless/mobile);
  • Telecom market forecasts for selective years to 2015 or 2019.

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

Executive Summary

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

Spain’s telecom market is one of the largest in Europe, accounting for around 4% of the country’s GDP. The market’s value fell by about 5.4% in 2009, to some €41.7 billion, largely due to the continuing economic crisis which has severely dampened consumer spend in all sectors. It is unlikely to show real growth until 2011. Sector investment has also hit hard: the crisis of liquidity reduced investment by 15% in 2008, while a continuing lack of confidence in the markets reduced it by a further 17% in 2009. This has had knock-on effects on many levels, leading to operators being unable to fulfil their network upgrade commitments and to downsize their targets.

Of total turnover, the fixed-line sector accounted for about €6.2 billion and the mobile sector for about €14.6 billion: the fixed-voice sector continues to shrink as VoIP and mobile services gain in popularity, while almost half of fixed telephone lines are now bundled with other services, especially broadband. This bundling has enabled alternative operators to gain market share. The broadband sector has been the catalyst for the market’s main activity - together with data traffic on mobile networks, these were the only areas that have shown positive growth.

Despite economic difficulties, Spain continues to pursue one of Europe’s more ambitious telecom infrastructure schemes – the second phase of the national Avanza Plan, to run through to 2012, will provide further impetus to R&D investment and increase the volume of economic activity relating to the use of ICTs. The Plan has thus far been allocated about €6.6 billion in public funds.

The regulator expected that about half of households will be served by FttH within the next 10-12 years, with most accesses provided by Telefónica and alternative operators to which Telefónica must provide network access. The regulator is ambitious in its expectation of the number of competitors which will service urban areas, and since no significant operator presence is expected in regions with fewer than 5,000 people it must anticipate contributing substantial public funds.

Indeed, the regulator’s calculations may prove to be wildly optimistic, in that there is hardly any other country which anticipates competing fibre-optic infrastructures in towns with fewer than 100,000 inhabitants.

Overall, FttH deployments in Spain have been hampered by a continuing lack of investment in NGNs by most network operators, with the result that FttH is generally offered only by small regional operators. Telefónica’s FttH network is geographically limited, while other operators such as Orange and ONO are not investing in FttH on a large scale: Orange has trialled FttH while ONO has concentrated on delivering EuroDOCSIS 3.0 technology to deliver 100Mb/s services. As a result, whereas in other European markets where operators have tended to concentrate on high-density towns (Paris, Milan, Amsterdam), in Spain FttH is more widely available in villages and rural areas, largely through municipal-led efforts.

In the mobile sector, the number of subscribers grew 4% in 2009 and voice traffic increased by about the same, though service revenue fell 4.7%. This was largely the result of cuts in mobile termination rates (MTRs) and lower voice and data roaming charges imposed by the regulator, as well as competition which has brought down the average price of mobile phone calls by 5.7% in 2009 alone. This drop is in line with the trend seen in previous years, and it is likely to continue into 2011 though the focus will be on the competitive mobile data sector.

Spain – key telecom parameters – 2010 - 2011

Sector

April 2010

2011 (e)

Broadband:

Fixed broadband subscribers (million)

10.09

11.86

Fixed broadband penetration rate

22%

27%

Mobile broadband subscribers (million)

2.5

3.7

Subscribers to telecoms services:

Fixed-line telephony (million)

19.87

19.30

SIM cards in service (million)

54.5

57.1

SIM penetration (population)

112%

120%

(Source: BuddeComm)

Market highlights

  • IPTV has become increasingly popular in Spain, either as a standalone service or, more normally, as part of a bundled offer. IPTV really began to take off in 2006 when network upgrades in both the cable and DSL sectors allowed high-bandwidth applications to reach a good proportion of the population, and as providers started to offer numerous channels to attract and retain customer interest. By early 2010, IPTV had reached about 21% of homes, and Spain had the second highest take-up of IPTV in Europe, after France. Nevertheless, the market is dominated by Telefónica, which stands to gain in coming years from the failure of its main competitor, Jazztelia.
  • Although the government prepared a legal framework for mobile TV services through DVB-H, and allowed for a digital mux to supply 20 mobile TV channels simultaneously, the service has been put on hold through lack of consumer demand and the absence of viable business models from operators. As a result, in 2011 the frequencies assigned to mobile TV may be allocated to other services.
  • Telefónica and Jazztel operate the country’s most advanced NGNs, which should serve up to half of the country’s households with FttH by 2023. Regulations mean that Telefónica must provide duct access to alternative operators at the same price it charges its own FttH operations. Most smaller towns will be served by Telefónica and at least one alternative operator, providing realistic competition. The estimated payback time for alternative operators in the major cities would be between 9 and 12 years, increasing to 13 to 14 years for towns and cities with a population between 5,000 and 50,000.
  • Intense competition in the mobile market has led to lower prices for consumers and more generous data offers from providers. Regulations simplifying mobile number portability led to the transfer of 4.5 ported numbers in 2009 alone. As a result, the TeliaSonera-owned Yoigo, having experienced a tortuous inception in this market, has captured a 6% share of the mobile market by subscribers.
  • Mobile broadband is among the telecom’s sector’s strongest cards, with the number of subscribers to mobile datacards growing 65% in 2009. Datacard penetration should reach about 15% of all mobile phone users by 2011, placing additional pressure on the ability of HSPA and future LTE networks to cope with traffic demand.

For those needing high level strategic information and objective analysis on the telecommunications sector in Spain, this report is essential reading and gives further information on:

  • Developments in the digital broadcast market, IPTV and VoD;
  • Market liberalisation and regulatory issues;
  • The impact of the global economic crisis;
  • Telecoms operators – privatisation, acquisitions, new licences;
  • Internet and broadband development and growth;
  • VoIP, IPTV, VoD, digital TV and DTTV;
  • Historical and current subscriber statistics;
  • Average Revenue per User (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 Spain’s telecom market
    • 2.2 Avanza Plan
  • 3. Regulatory Environment
    • 3.1 History
    • 3.2 Regulatory authority
      • 3.2.1 Telecommunications Market Commission (CMT)
    • 3.3 Telecom sector liberalisation in Spain
      • 3.3.1 Privatisation of Telefónica
      • 3.3.2 Interconnect
      • 3.3.3 Access
      • 3.3.4 Number portability
      • 3.3.5 Carrier PreSelection (CPS)
      • 3.3.6 Wholesale Line Rental (WLR)
  • 4. Fixed Network Market
    • 4.1 Overview of operators
    • 4.2 Telefónica
      • 4.2.1 Going into 2010
    • 4.3 The Auna Group (historic)
    • 4.4 Orange
    • 4.5 Vodafone España
    • 4.6 Jazztel
    • 4.7 ONO
    • 4.8 Comunitel (historic)
    • 4.9 BT España
  • 5. Telecommunications Infrastructure
    • 5.1 National telecom network
    • 5.2 International infrastructure
      • 5.2.1 Satellite networks
      • 5.2.2 Submarine cable
    • 5.3 Next Generation Networks (NGN)
  • 6. Broadband Market
    • 6.1 Overview
      • 6.1.1 Broadband statistics
      • 6.1.2 Government initiatives
    • 6.2 Cable modems
      • 6.2.1 ONO
    • 6.3 Asymmetrical Digital Subscriber Line (ADSL)
      • 6.3.1 Telefónica
      • 6.3.2 Other DSL developments
      • 6.3.3 ADSL2+
      • 6.3.4 VDSL
    • 6.4 Fibre-to-the-Home (FttH) networks
      • 6.4.1 Regulatory issues
      • 6.4.2 Fibre market – 2010
      • 6.4.3 Telefónica
      • 6.4.4 Orange
      • 6.4.5 Other developments
    • 6.5 Wireless broadband
      • 6.5.1 Wireless Local Loop (WLL)
      • 6.5.2 WiFi
      • 6.5.3 WiMAX
      • 6.5.4 Internet via satellite
      • 6.5.5 Mobile broadband
    • 6.6 Broadband Powerline (BPL)
  • 7. Digital Media
    • 7.1 Key general trends
    • 7.2 Business models
      • 7.2.1 Triple play
    • 7.3 Regulatory issues
      • 7.3.1 VoIP
    • 7.4 Digital TV
      • 7.4.1 Market overview and statistics
      • 7.4.2 Pay DTTV
      • 7.4.3 Regulatory environment
      • 7.4.4 TV-over-DSL (IPTV)
      • 7.4.5 Video-on-Demand (VoD)
      • 7.4.6 Personal Video Recorders (PVRs)
      • 7.4.7 Cable TV (CATV)
      • 7.4.8 Satellite TV
      • 7.4.9 Digital Terrestrial TV (DTTV)
      • 7.4.10 FTA TV
      • 7.4.11 VoIP
  • 8. Mobile Communications
    • 8.1 Overview of Spain’s mobile market
      • 8.1.1 Mobile statistics
      • 8.1.2 Operator market shares
    • 8.2 Regulatory issues
      • 8.2.1 Spectrum regulations and spectrum auctions
      • 8.2.2 Roaming
      • 8.2.3 Mobile number portability
      • 8.2.4 Mobile termination rates (MTRs)
    • 8.3 Mobile technologies
      • 8.3.1 Digital
      • 8.3.2 Third Generation (3G) mobile
    • 8.4 Major mobile operators
      • 8.4.1 Telefónica Móviles
      • 8.4.2 Vodafone
      • 8.4.3 Orange
      • 8.4.4 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 Overview
      • 8.7.2 General Packet Radio Service (GPRS)
      • 8.7.3 Enhanced data for GSM Evolution (EDGE)
      • 8.7.4 Push-to-Talk (PTT)
      • 8.7.5 High-Speed Packet Access (HSPA)
      • 8.7.6 Long-term evolution (LTE)
      • 8.7.7 BlackBerry
      • 8.7.8 iPhone
      • 8.7.9 Femtocells
      • 8.7.10 i-mode
      • 8.7.11 Mobile TV
    • 8.8 Mobile content and applications
      • 8.8.1 Content co-operation
  • 9. Forecasts
    • 9.1 Forecasts – broadband subscribers – 2010 - 2013; 2020
      • 9.1.1 Scenario 1 – stronger broadband subscriber growth
      • 9.1.2 Scenario 2 – lower broadband subscriber growth
    • 9.2 Forecasts – mobile ARPU – 2010 - 2011; 2015
    • 9.3 Forecasts – UMTS subscribers – 2010 - 2011; 2015
  • 10. Glossary of Abbreviations
  • Table 1 – Country statistics Spain – 2009
  • Table 2 – Telecom revenue and investment statistics – 2009
  • Table 3 – Telephone network statistics – February 2010
  • Table 4 – Internet user statistics – 2009
  • Table 5 – Broadband statistics – February 2010
  • Table 6 – Mobile statistics – February 2010
  • Table 7 – National telecommunications authority
  • Table 8 – Telecom revenue, retail and wholesale – 2000 - 2009
  • Table 9 – Telecom retail revenue by sector – 2005 - 2009
  • Table 10 – Telecom retail revenue annual change, by sector – 2002 - 2009
  • Table 11 – Telecom revenue by operator, wholesale plus retail – 2005 - 2009
  • Table 12 – Telecom investment by sector (historical) – 2003 - 2006
  • Table 13 – Telecom investment and annual change – 2000 - 2007
  • Table 14 – Proportion of fixed-line and mobile traffic – 2000 - 2010
  • Table 15 – E-commerce revenue – 2005 - 2009
  • Table 16 – Interconnection traffic share by operator – 2005 - 2008
  • Table 17 – Wholesale interconnection revenue – 2007 - 2009
  • Table 18 – Unbundled loops and access lines – 2005 - 2009
  • Table 19 – Access lines by type (regulator data) – 2008 - 2010
  • Table 20 – LLU, shared access price - connection and monthly rental – 2005 - 2008
  • Table 21 – Wholesale access lines by type – 2007 - 2009
  • Table 22 – Subscribers by type of access – 2006 - 2009
  • Table 23 – Cumulative fixed lines ported – 2002 - 2010
  • Table 24 – Carrier PreSelection lines – 2005 - 2009
  • Table 25 – Fixed-line market share of revenue by operators – 2005 - 2009
  • Table 26 – Fixed-line subscribers and market share by operators – 2008 - 2009
  • Table 27 – Fixed-line market revenue by traffic, line rental – 2002 - 2009
  • Table 28 – Fixed-line ARPU per line – 2005 - 2009
  • Table 29 – Fixed-line price index – 2004 - 2009
  • Table 30 – Telefónica Group financial data – 2006 - 2009
  • Table 31 – Telefónica de España financial data – 2006 - 2009
  • Table 32 – Telefónica de España wireline revenue by sector – 2005 - 2009
  • Table 33 – Telefónica de España subscribers by service – 2005 - 2009
  • Table 34 – Orange subscribers – 2005 - 2010
  • Table 35 – Orange mobile financial data – 2007 - 2010
  • Table 36 – Vodafone financial data – 2008 - 2009
  • Table 37 – Jazztel revenue by sector – 2008 - 2010
  • Table 38 – Jazztel subscribers by sector and annual change – 2006 - 2010
  • Table 39 – ONO financial data by sector – 2006 - 2009
  • Table 40 – ONO subscribers by sector – 2006 - 2009
  • Table 41 – Fixed lines in service and penetration – 1999 - 2010
  • Table 42 – Broadband revenue by operator – 2005 - 2009
  • Table 43 – Broadband revenue by technology – 2003 - 2009
  • Table 44 – Internet market revenue – 2006 - 2011
  • Table 45 – Internet users and penetration rate – 1996 - 2011
  • Table 46 – Dial-up Internet subscribers – 2005 - 2011
  • Table 47 – Total broadband subscribers by access type and penetration rate – 2001 - 2010
  • Table 48 – Proportion of broadband subscribers by sector – 2004 - 2010
  • Table 49 – Annual growth of broadband by technology – 2004 - 2011
  • Table 50 – Proportion of broadband lines by data speed and operator – 2008
  • Table 51 – Proportion of broadband lines by data speed and operator – 2009
  • Table 52 – Number of broadband lines by data speed – 2005 - 2009
  • Table 53 – Share of broadband lines by access type – 2003 - 2009
  • Table 54 – Share of broadband accesses by operator – 2003 - 2009
  • Table 55 – Broadband lines and market share by operator – 2006 - 2009
  • Table 56 – Broadband penetration by technology – 2004 - 2009
  • Table 57 – Broadband subscribers by type – incumbent or other provider – 2006 - 2009
  • Table 58 – Cable modem subscribers – 2000 - 2010
  • Table 59 – Share of cable accesses – 2005 - 2009
  • Table 60 – Cable subscribers by operator – 2007 - 2009
  • Table 61 – Share of cable broadband revenue – 2008 - 2009
  • Table 62 – ONO financial data by sector – 2006 - 2009
  • Table 63 – ONO subscribers by sector – 2006 - 2009
  • Table 64 – ADSL subscribers – 2000 - 2010
  • Table 65 – DSL subscribers by operator – 2007 - 2009
  • Table 66 – Telefónica de España Internet subscribers – 2006 - 2009
  • Table 67 – Telefónica de España Internet revenue by sector – 2006 - 2009
  • Table 68 – Telefónica de España wholesale broadband accesses by sector – 2006 - 2009
  • Table 69 – JAZZTEL subscribers – 2009 - 2010
  • Table 70 – JAZZTEL broadband subscribers – 2008 - 2010
  • Table 71 – Fibre broadband subscribers – 2009
  • Table 72 – WiFi/WiMAX subscribers – 2008 - 2009
  • Table 73 – WiFi hotspots in operation – 2005 - 2010
  • Table 74 – Audiovisual revenue by service – 2009
  • Table 75 – Subscribers with bundled services, by type – September 2009
  • Table 76 – Digital content revenue by service – 2007 - 2009
  • Table 77 – TV revenue by technology – 2002 - 2009
  • Table 78 – Proportion of pay TV subscribers by technology – 2005 - 2009
  • Table 79 – Proportion of households with DTTV – 2003 - 2011
  • Table 80 – TV market subscribers by technology – 2002 - 2009
  • Table 81 – Forecast TV market subscribers by technology – 2014; 2019; 2023
  • Table 82 – Digital TV revenue by operator – 2007 - 2009
  • Table 83 – Pay TV subscribers by operator, market share – 2006 - 2009
  • Table 84 – IPTV revenue – 2005 - 2009
  • Table 85 – IPTV subscribers – 2007 - 2009
  • Table 86 – IPTV market share – 2006 - 2009
  • Table 87 – Telefónica IPTV subscribers – 2008 - 2009
  • Table 88 – Orange IPTV subscribers – 2007 - 2010
  • Table 89 – Cable TV subscribers – 1996 - 2011
  • Table 90 – ONO financial data by sector – 2006 - 2009
  • Table 91 – ONO subscribers by sector – 2006 - 2009
  • Table 92 – Satellite TV subscribers – 1997 - 2009
  • Table 93 – Satellite broadcasting capacity and transponders by operator – 2008
  • Table 94 – Digital+ ARPU – 2006 - 2009
  • Table 95 – Digital + subscribers – 2002 - 2009
  • Table 96 – Digital + financial data – 2008 - 2009
  • Table 97 – Sogecable pay TV financial data – 2006 - 2009
  • Table 98 – Sogecable Cuatro financial data – 2006 - 2009
  • Table 99 – Prisa financial data and annual change – 2008 - 2009
  • Table 100 – Mobile market revenue – 2000 - 2011
  • Table 101 – Mobile traffic prepaid and contract in minutes – 2000 - 2009
  • Table 102 – Mobile market revenue by sector – 2006 - 2009
  • Table 103 – Mobile market revenue by contract and prepaid sectors – 2000 - 2009
  • Table 104 – Mobile market revenue by operator – 2004 - 2009
  • Table 105 – Mobile operators, subscribers and annual change – 2009
  • Table 106 – Mobile subscribers by operator (regulator data) – 2006 - 2009
  • Table 107 – Mobile subscribers and penetration rate – 1997; 1999 - 2011
  • Table 108 – Mobile price index – 2005 - 2009
  • Table 109 – Cost per invoiced minute of use: contract, prepaid; all operators – 2001 - 2009
  • Table 110 – Mobile ARPU per sector – 2005 - 2008
  • Table 111 – Subscriber market share by operator – 2004 - 2010
  • Table 112 – Roaming revenue – 2006 - 2010
  • Table 113 – European roaming charges – 2007 - 2012
  • Table 114 – Cumulative mobile number portings – 2002 - 2010
  • Table 115 – Mobile termination rates by operator – 2007 - 2011
  • Table 116 – Operator share of interconnection traffic and revenue – 2008
  • Table 117 – Mobile interconnection revenue – 2003 - 2010
  • Table 118 – GSM/GPRS and 3G base stations – 2002 - 2010
  • Table 119 – Orange UMTS subscribers – 2007 - 2010
  • Table 120 – Yoigo subscribers – 2007 - 2010
  • Table 121 – Yoigo financial data – 2008 - 2010
  • Table 122 – Telefónica mobile subscribers and ARPU – 2005 - 2009
  • Table 123 – Telefónica Móviles financial data – 2006 - 2009
  • Table 124 – Vodafone financial data – 2007 - 2010
  • Table 125 – Vodafone mobile subscribers and ARPU statistics – 2006 - 2009
  • Table 126 – Vodafone mobile customer retention cost – 2007 - 2009
  • Table 127 – Orange mobile subscribers prepaid and contract – 2005 - 2010
  • Table 128 – Orange mobile revenue – 2006 - 2010
  • Table 129 – Orange annualised ARPU by sector – 2005 - 2010
  • Table 130 – Orange mobile customer acquisition costs – 2007 - 2009
  • Table 131 – Mobile subscribers: prepaid, contract – 2006 - 2009
  • Table 132 – Prepaid revenue – 2007 - 2009
  • Table 133 – SMS revenue and messages sent – 2006 - 2009
  • Table 134 – Premium SMS revenue and messages sent – 2005 - 2009
  • Table 135 – MMS revenue and messages sent – 2004 - 2009
  • Table 136 – Mobile data revenue – 2007 - 2010
  • Table 137 – Mobile datacard numbers per UMTS and HSDPA – 2006 - 2009
  • Table 138 – HSPA subscribers – 2006 - 2009
  • Table 139 – Mobile TV subscribers by operator – 2008 - 2009
  • Table 140 – Forecast broadband subscribers – higher market growth scenario – 2008 - 2013; 2020
  • Table 141 – Forecast broadband subscribers – lower market growth scenario – 2008 - 2013; 2020
  • Table 142 – Forecast mobile monthly ARPU – 2005 - 2011; 2015
  • Table 143 – Forecast UMTS subscribers – 2006 - 2011; 2015
  • Exhibit 1 – EU – The New Regulatory Framework (NRF)
  • Exhibit 2 – Access and the local loop
  • Exhibit 3 – Narrowband and broadband wireless licensees – 2000
  • Exhibit 4 – Overview of media convergence
  • Exhibit 5 – 3G licence results in Spain – March 2000

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

"You turned out to be very helpful in answering (our client’s) additional questions and providing us proactively with updated information to support this. BuddeComm definitely provides high-quality service"

Joost Brakel, Deloitte

» 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