About Mobilecrunch

MobileCrunch is Mobile 2.0. Our mission is to identify, profile, test and even help develop the technologies, applications, services and devices that will define the next generation of connected mobile computing.

More about Mobilecrunch.

TechCrunch Network

CrunchBase
CrunchBoard Jobs
CrunchGear
CrunchNotes
InviteShare
Gillmor Gang
MobileCrunch
TalkCrunch
TechCrunch Forums
TechCrunch UK
TechCrunch en Français
TechCrunch 日本語版
TechCrunch

November 27, 2007

Wireless Cutting into European Landlines

Posted by John Kullman

euflag2.jpgA report by the EU statistical office Eurostat reported today that almost one in five EU households have gone fully wireless, cutting off landline subscriptions that dominated the telecommunications market for over one hundred years. In 2005, out of every 100 habitants, 95 had a mobile phone. In 1996 only 8 out of 100 could go mobile.

New comers to the European Union tend to have more wireless only households. A country like the Czech Republic boasts that 42% of households have switched over to mobile phones, while only 11% in Germany can make that same claim. It is believed the poor landline infrastructure in ex-communist countries has fueled the switch to wireless handsets in central and eastern Europe.

In Finland, home of mobile giant Nokia, 47% of households have done away with landlines to embrace cellphones. But in Sweden, where rival Ericsson is headquartered, 0% of households rely only on mobile phones.

For every 100 people, Luxembourg leads the EU with 158 mobile subscription, or 1.58 subscriptions per person. Lithuania and Italy are close seconds with 127 and 122, respectively.

The report also has stats on the most talkative mobile users. Cypriots were the chattiest EU citizens, talking an average of 6 minutes a day per subscriber. The figure was lowest in Poland and Germany, with 1.3 and 1.6 minutes of talk time, respectively.

Eurostat

1 Comment

  1. Living in Bulgaria, I can tell you that the infrastructure is not a problem. But there is definitely a trend on mobiles over landlines.

    What gives you a landline?

    Comment by SM — November 27, 2007 @ 10:35 am

RSS feed for comments on this post.

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.