Deutsche Telekom, Orange, Telefonica and other operators
have lobbied for two decades for US tech giants to contribute to 5G and
broadband roll-out, saying they create a huge part of the region's internet
traffic.
The European Commission launched a consultation early this
year on whether tech giants should bear some of the costs of Europe's telecoms
network.
Companies such as Meta have said such a move would not solve
the telcos' financial problems and ignores hefty investments by tech companies.
Telcos that receive subsidies should also face strong
regulatory oversight, including a process to ensure the funds are only used for
network investment, Meta said in a response to the European Commission's
exploratory consultation on network fee.
A majority of European Union countries have also rejected
the push to levy a network fee on Big Tech, sources told Reuters earlier this
month.
The European Commission did not immediately respond to a
Reuters request for comment.
Meta said "the Commission should first require a
demonstration by any telco seeking subsidies that it has first engaged with
CAPs (content application providers) in good faith to reach technical,
non-subsidy solutions".
It added any subsidies be awarded by a tender to ensure
availability to all network operators, not just the large players.
"Incumbent operators receiving the functional
equivalent of government bailouts should have additional restrictions imposed
on them such as elimination of executive bonuses, caps on compensation, freezes
on dividends," it said. © Reuters