Huge jump in mobile phone usage reported
Figures issued today show a huge jump in the usage of mobile phones in the third quarter of this year compared to the same period last year.
Outgoing mobile phone minutes to fixed lines increased by 47.5% to 14.6 million. Local outgoing minutes to mobile traffic was up 22.7% to 106.7 million while mobile originating minutes to international networks grew by 82.5% to 3.7 million minutes.
Outgoing SMS traffic declined by 2.1% but still totalled an astronomical 144.9 million. Outgoing MMS traffic picked up, recording an increase of 46.2% to 46,092.
The National Statistics Office said that subscriptions to all forms of communication technology, with the exception of fixed telephony, increased.
Broadband subscriptions grew by 6.5 per cent, reaching 127,976. The majority of broadband subscribers had a connection speed of at least 2 Mbps, while internet speeds exceeding 10 Mbps recorded a substantial increase.
The internet subscription index as at the end of September stood at 137.5, up by 6.3 percentage points over 2010.
Television subscriptions numbered 148,668, while the television subscription index went up by 2.5 percentage points when compared to the corresponding reference period in 2010. The main cause of this change was an increase in digital subscriptions, which advanced by 7.3 per cent.
On the other hand, a drop of 33.7 per cent was registered in the number of analogue subscriptions. In the third quarter, digital subscriptions accounted for 93 per cent of total television subscriptions.
The number of fixed telephone subscriptions totalled 240,915, a drop of
2.2 per cent over the corresponding quarter last year. The fixed telephone subscription index registered a decline equivalent to 2.2 percentage points when compared to last year.
During the same period, total fixed originating minutes to national and international networks dropped by 10.7 and 14.2 per cent respectively.
Mobile telephone subscriptions stood at 525,848, up by 17.8 per cent when compared to the previous year. Increases were recorded in both post-paid and pre-paid schemes.
The mobile penetration rate per 100 persons in the population amounted to 125.4 per cent, implying that a considerable number of individuals have more than one mobile account.
Increases were recorded in local originating mobile traffic, both towards fixed and mobile telephone networks. Drops were registered in inbound roaming activities, while outbound roaming calls and SMSs increased substantially.
Total postal traffic reached 10.3 million items, dropping by 2.4 per cent when compared to the corresponding quarter in 2010. Total parcels and other items were recorded at 21,341, an increase of 10.1 when compared to the previous year.
Items received and dispatched by couriers totalled 149,963 - a decrease by 22.6 per cent when compared to the corresponding quarter last year.
8 Comments
Post comment
Please sign in or create your Account to post comments.
E. Azzopardi
Dec 6th 2011, 13:49
Yes, there is also a VERY huge jump of "drivers" using the mobile, too. And they do it everywhere and even through red lights. It seems they are not afraid of anything. But then the warden is there to give a ticket to a car which is 10 centimeters on the yellow line and these moron drivers go on as if nothing is happening. Don't you see all these drivers with their mobile to their ear and more seriously sending messages? I think most of us are blind, then.
Joseph Calleja
Dec 5th 2011, 15:04
Why blame GO, Melita and Vodafone for making big monies? These are business companies trying to make the most of their investment and the sad part is we all oblige. We are the ones using their services and willing to pay the price for that service.. We use the mobile at home, outside our homes but mostly in our vehicles, yes while driving. Keep feeding the piggy and watch it get fatter. You decide.
E. Azzopardi
Dec 6th 2011, 13:49
Bravu!!!
Mark. Galea
Dec 5th 2011, 14:45
u terz tal-popolazzjoni fir-riskju tal-faqar ...
Mr Eric Gahn
Dec 5th 2011, 14:21
Just look at some contract in the UK. Stg30 a month, 1000mins calls, 1000 sms, unlimited data.
Claudio Pace
Dec 5th 2011, 13:43
These figures are proof, if ever it was needed, that the maltese communication companies’ cash cows are at their best.
Despite this, GO plc has just increased tariffs for a number of its products related to the Home Pack. The most obvious increase is that of each Conditional Access Card being charged a monthly Network Access Fee of €3.99 (up from €2.99). A more subtle change is to start charging mobile phones which form part of the Home Pack community 25c per minute charged on a per minute basis. For the uninitiated this means that a “wrong number” call lasting 3-5 seconds will cost 25c and a 61-second call will cost 50c.
One might argue that they have the right to set their tariffs the way that they see fit, which is true. However sending letters to their most loyal customers, the ones which have committed themselves to buying a range of services i.e. the Home Pack, and informing them that the changes are with immediate effect and that if this is unacceptable to them then they are free to terminate the agreement (in other words, buzz off) is simply not on. If I wanted to be treated in this manner I would have gone elsewhere in the first place.
I’m going to be in the market for a new service provider in the very near future.
Paul Pace
Dec 5th 2011, 14:20
Well said Claudio.
What I cannot digest is that the contract bounds only us the customers and not the service provider.
It is very unfair! Where is the watchdog to investigate such unjustness?
George Calleja
Dec 5th 2011, 12:15
Kollha cifri li juru sinjal ta progress. Ara x'qed idahhlu GO, Melita u Vodafone......u r-rati qatt ma jonqsu!!