THE SIXTH APEC MINISTERIAL MEETING ON THE
TELECOMMUNICATIONS AND INFORMATION INDUSTRY (TELMIN6)
(1-3 June, 2005 Lima, Peru)
Annex B
Key Principles for Broadband Development
In the APEC Region
Information and communication technologies support economic prosperity in
APEC and the development of the Asia Pacific Information Society. Broadband
connectivity has become an essential component of these technologies. Since
TELMIN 3 in 1998, Ministers have called upon the TEL to explore the development
of broadband information infrastructures, stressing the need to extend broadband
capabilities to rural and underserved areas. At TELMIN 5 in 2002, Ministers
underscored the need to focus on broadband technology and its implications for
economic growth. Noting the e-APEC Strategy and the TEL Digital Divide
Blueprint for Action, Ministers also tied the TEL's broadband efforts to the
Ministers and Leaders call to resolve the Digital Divide issues of universal
access to ICTs.
Key Principles:
To meet the Bogor and Brunei Goals and other benchmarks for timely
development set by Leaders, the APEC TEL Ministers recommend a new objective of
universal broadband access. To attain this objective, economies are encouraged
to develop and implement domestic broadband policies that:
Maximize Access and Usage
- Facilitate access to broadband services based on competitive and
market-based principles within all communities in APEC economies, irrespective
of location.
- Emphasize and enhance human capacity building to ensure business,
community, and individual users' ability to take advantage of the full
benefits of broadband services as well as to protect the integrity of
networks.
- Promote the important social and economic benefits of broadband by
encouraging the use of broadband in the delivery of government services and
assist communities in capturing opportunities for broadband deployment.
- Encourage the development of broadband service technologies, local
content, and applications to support the rapid expansion and usage of
broadband for the strengthening of economies, societies, and cultures.
- Recognize the critical role of the private sector and academia in
the research and development of new broadband technologies, and in the
deployment, expansion, and use of broadband infrastructure.
- Consider the strategic use of targeted government incentives for
infrastructure expansion to rural, remote, and underserved areas where
broadband deployment is not yet commercially viable.
Facilitate Continued Competition and Liberalization
- Support effective competition and continued liberalization in
infrastructure, network services and applications in the face of convergence
across different technological platforms that supply broadband services.
- Promote competition between different network infrastructures that
deliver broadband services, and encourage industry to work towards the
compatibility and interoperability of these infrastructures.
- Support market liberalization and pro-competition policies that
encourage broadband infrastructure investment and expansion to realize last
mile connectivity.
- Promote and support technology choice so that competitive market
forces are able to generate the best results for users, while giving due
respect to legitimate domestic policy objectives for broadband deployment and
taking into consideration the spirit of WTO objectives in this regard.
- Continue efforts towards liberalization and fair and effective
competition that support and promote the growth of products, applications and
services that can be delivered electronically via broadband.
Foster Enabling Regulatory Frameworks
- Ensure regulatory frameworks are transparent and
non-discriminatory to reduce uncertainty and encourage investment.
- Ensure that regulatory frameworks allow the interests of all
parties to be considered.
- Develop and maintain regulatory frameworks that promote access to
existing infrastructure as well as provide appropriate incentives for new
infrastructure investment.
- Promote efficient and effective spectrum use to encourage the
provision of broadband services.
Build Confidence in the Use of Broadband Networks and Services
- Instill user confidence in information systems and
telecommunications networks by ensuring that reliability, security, and
privacy are properly addressed.
- Ensure effective protection of digital intellectual property
rights (IPR) through domestic laws generally in accordance with the
international treaties and agreements relevant to the individual economy, and
promote awareness of respecting IPR while encouraging the use of information
and the sharing of knowledge.
- Combat cybercrime by endeavoring to establish domestic legal
frameworks that take account of the Convention on Cyber Crime (2001).
- Develop domestic computer incident response capabilities that can
cooperate with those of other APEC economies in protecting networks from
technological threats.
- Enhance the information and experience sharing of successful
projects, practices, strategies and the benefits derived amongst economies to
build confidence and facilitate broadband take-up.