By Ahmad Hathout

The CRTC is seeking a contractor to analyze the wireline transport market, as it prepares to make a decision on an updated wholesale internet access framework.

According to the procurement document, dated Thursday, the regulator is looking for a contractor to draft a definition of wholesale wireline high-speed transport services market, which should “allow for upcoming technological changes.”

It is also seeking an analysis of the group of products that consumers would consider to be substitutes for the service and an assessment of the geographic area in which a customer purchases a service and “whether or not a customer would be willing to switch from a supplier in one area to a supplier in another area.”

The CRTC is also seeking to collect and analyze information describing the “products currently available that are or could be used to offer wholesale wireline high-speed transport services in Canada, including their locations, capacity and limitations;” a description and assessment of network configuration and competitor requirements for purchasing transport services; and an analysis of the smallest geographic areas where consumers would not be willing to switch supplier.

The deadline for bids is August 1.

The contract comes as the regulator prepares to release its decision on the wholesale internet access framework, which it said it’s aiming to release by the end of the summer.

The ruling is expected to lower wholesale internet access prices so that third-party competitors that lease access from the larger players can better compete on price.

But the decision is also anticipated for what it will or will not say about last-mile fibre access.

The regulator has for a long time held up a regime that allowed competitors mandated access to the last-mile fibre of the incumbents in exchange for them going out and getting their own traffic transport mile. But it has, in recent times, said this regime is economically untenable for wholesalers because of the many more connection points the competitors have to make.

So, in November, the regulator ruled on a temporary basis that Bell and Telus must open up their fibre networks on a bundled basis to competitors in Ontario and Quebec until it makes a final ruling on the wholesale internet framework.

The outstanding questions are: Will the regulator make this a permanent fixture of the updated regime? Will it require the same of the large cable companies like Rogers? Will the large players have continued access to the wholesale internet regime and, if so, to what extent?

Here is the full scope of the work the CRTC is requesting of the contractor:

Photo via Canada Infrastructure Bank

Author