Photo: The Canadian Press
A cell tower is pictured in rural Ontario.
The federal industry minister says despite data showing that the cost of telecommunications services has declined in Canada, many Canadians still do not feel the effect.
Speaking Monday at the 23rd annual Canadian Telecom Summit in downtown Toronto, Minister François-Philippe Champagne said he wants to make sure Canadians are aware of improved offers on the market as their cellphone and internet consumption increases.
“Our challenge is for Canadians to feel it,” he said during a panel discussion led by Canadian Telecommunications Association president Robert Ghiz.
“Sometimes my challenge is that the data says something, but people would say, ‘Well, what about me?'”
Ghiz highlighted Statistics Canada data showing cellphone plan prices have come down around 50 per cent in Canada over the past five years, including 26 per cent over the past year.
“I know a politician and a government will never declare mission accomplished,” said Ghiz, whose association represents carriers and manufacturers in the industry.
“But will you at least take a little credit, and perhaps (give) a little to the industry?”
Champagne said he was happy about the numbers, which capture the latest plan offers on the market, but acknowledged they don’t reflect the prices paid by those still on legacy cellphone and internet plans.
“The prices of cellphone and internet is a staple in the budget of most Canadian families and it’s a big-ticket item, so people are rightfully — not just in Canada, I would say in different parts of the world — concerned,” said the minister.
“So therefore, yes, we’re going to be keeping on pushing and making sure that we do our part through regulation and otherwise, that Canadians see what the industry has been doing in terms of having an easier way to shop and change plans.”
A new report by PricewaterhouseCoopers, commissioned by the telecom association, said the sector contributed $80.8 billion to the Canadian economy last year while supporting nearly 782,000 jobs.
The report, released Monday, said Canada’s telecommunications sector spent $11.4 billion in capital investments in 2023 to expand wireless and broadband networks, which amounts to 42.6 per cent more per subscriber, on average, than carriers in the U.S., Japan, Australia and Europe spend.
Along with the state of the regulatory environment, topics on the agenda for this year’s conference include cybersecurity and AI threats, along with how satellite technology can bridge connectivity gaps in rural and remote regions.
During his address, Champagne announced the federal government will launch a consultation on how to expand wireless services through satellite technology.
Despite the money being spent to expand networks, he said connectivity barriers remain for those in rural and remote regions in Canada.
“This is the next frontier where Canadians will be able to use their current phone, or basically the next version of it, to be able to have absolute connectivity,” Champagne said.
With natural disasters on the rise, he said it would also serve as a form of network resiliency when traditional networks go down due to power outages.
Some of Canada’s carriers have already begun exploring satellite connectivity.
Telus announced last year it successfully trialled technology that lets smartphones send and receive voice calls and text messages using satellites. The test was in partnership with Montreal-based provider TerreStar Solutions Inc. and non-terrestrial network service provider Skylo.
Rogers has teamed up with SpaceX and Lynk Global to deliver satellite-to-phone connectivity, while New Brunswick-based rural internet provider Xplore Inc. committed to offering satellite internet in remote locations last fall after the launch of the Jupiter 3 satellite into space.
Ghiz said it is “essential” for carriers to benefit from a stable regulatory environment which encourages investment in order to sustain high spending.
During a separate presentation, Quebecor Inc. CEO Pierre Karl Péladeau emphasized more changes are needed when it comes to regulations in order to foster competition and bring prices down.
Péladeau, whose company has been expanding its Videotron subsidiary after the purchase of Freedom Mobile last year, has vowed to build out 5G networks across Canada in the coming years. In the meantime, the company is taking advantage of the mobile virtual network operator (MVNO) framework put in place by the CRTC, which allows telecoms to offer cellphone service through rival carriers’ networks.
The rules are meant to increase cellphone competition by giving regional carriers a presence in regions they did not previously serve, with requirements to build their own networks in those areas within seven years.
But Péladeau said Quebecor is being held back by “outdated” rules, such as those allowing incumbent carriers to offer service to customers at a retail cost below the rate that MVNOs pay for network access.
“We’re not parasites and we’re not going to be on others peoples’ network and do things that are not going to create value,” he said.
“The condition is to build, but before building you need to have access. We need to make sure that the roaming charges behind that will also fall. If not, then we will not have the proper conditions to continue to foster competition.”