Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
Thank you very much for inviting us here today to speak to the committee.
My name is Kirsten Embree. I've been asked by the Canadian Association of Internet Providers to appear before you today to address the subject of telecommunications deregulation.
The Canadian Association of Internet Providers, or CAIP, as we call it, is one of Canada's largest Internet industry associations, representing both large and small commercial Internet service providers, or ISPs, as well as companies and other organizations that are involved in the industry of Internet service provisioning.
Almost all of CAIP's members are independent ISPs, which means that they are not affiliated, as a result of their ownership, with either the incumbent telephone companies or the incumbent cable companies. As a consequence, CAIP's perspective on the issue of telecommunications deregulation is a unique one. It is one very much oriented towards the experience of new entrants in the market, who must compete with some very large and very well-financed incumbent operators.
Before providing you with our views on the subject of telecommunications deregulation, we thought it might be helpful to give you a brief snapshot or overview of the Canadian Internet services market.
In 2005, the revenues that were generated from the provision of Internet services in Canada reached $4.5 billion, which represented an 8.8% increase over the $4.2 billion generated in 2004. In 2005, the number of households with Internet access subscriptions reached eight million, which represents 64% of all Canadian households. As for the number of households with high-speed Internet access, this number reached 6.4 million households, or 51% of all Canadian households, up from 43% in the previous year.
At first blush, these statistics appear to paint a very rosy picture of the Internet services sector, but the reality of competing in this market is very different, and we are quickly coming to the point where we need to think about whether Canada has taken the right steps to promote competition and customer choice in this market segment.
In the CRTC's 2005 telecommunications monitoring report, there is a table that shows residential Internet subscriptions by type of Internet access provider. We have taken that table and turned it into a pie chart in order to demonstrate more graphically what is happening in this segment of the market.
For the record, our analysis indicates that 54% of all Internet subscribers in 2004 subscribed to the cable companies' high-speed modem service, 42% subscribed to the telephone companies' high-speed DSL services, and only 4% subscribed to the high-speed services of an independent ISP.
In the brief time remaining, I'd like to share with you some of CAIP's thoughts on what we believe has gone wrong with deregulation in the Internet services market and why our members hold such a paltry share, 4%, of that market.
As you may know, the CRTC decided to forbear from regulating the retail Internet services of the incumbent phone and cable companies in the late 1990s. Unfortunately, there was no comprehensive regime in place at that time for independent ISPs to gain access to all of the underlying facilities and services that are needed in order to provide high-speed Internet services to their own end-user customers.
The cable companies' wholesale cable modem service was only tariffed a couple of years ago, notwithstanding the fact that they had launched their own high-speed services more than ten years ago, and the phone companies have either avoided filing tariffs for their wholesale ADSL services or have priced those services so high that independent ISPs have found themselves in a classic margin squeeze.
Competitors need access to essential underlying facilities and services at cost-based rates and without the exorbitant markups that the incumbents will always choose to charge, absent the regulatory oversight of the CRTC. We urge you to take this into consideration in your committee deliberations and to also take a more holistic approach to the issue of telecom deregulation, just as the telecom policy review panel has done, in order to avoid patchwork regulatory fixes that only create problems down the road.