Manitoba

Data streaming has more than quadrupled in past 5 years: Bell CEO

The head of Bell Canada Enterprises says his company and its competitors have to invest in infrastructure to keep up with a booming consumer appetite for entertainment both at home and on mobile devices.

As Canadians watch more online, telecoms need infrastructure investment to keep up, George Cope says

Smartphone and tablet users are increasingly using their devices to watch TV and movies. Bell CEO George Cope says greater investment will be needed from telecom companies to meet increasing demand for online services. (Eric Risberg/Associated Press)

Internet and mobile providers must invest in infrastructure to keep up with a booming consumer appetite for entertainment both at home and on the go, Bell Canada Enterprises CEO George Cope said Tuesday.

High-speed mobile data usage is up 37 per cent from just last year, while the amount of data streaming over the Internet has more than quadrupled in five years, Cope told the Winnipeg Chamber of Commerce.

"The incredible growth we're seeing in wireless, we think it's going to continue. Video on wireless is clearly just an explosion," Cope said.

"We have to stay ahead of the capacity requirements to make sure the country's economy itself is running on the back of all these networks. But, also, we have to increase the speeds of these services because of … the amount of usage that we're seeing."

Bell (TSX:BCE) is on track to invest $20 billion in its networks over a five-year period that ends in 2020, Cope said, and competitors are also spending money to meet a growing demand for speed and reliability.

Providers everywhere have faced sweeping changes in consumer habits.

A report last month by the Convergence Research Group estimated that TV subscriptions in Canada will drop by 247,000 this year, up from 220,000 subscriber losses in 2016. Last year marked the first time Canadians spent more on internet access than on TV subscriptions, according to the CRTC.

Cope's speech followed the recent completion of Bell's $3.9-billion takeover of Manitoba Telecom Services.

The company has promised to spend $1 billion over five years on improvements in Manitoba such as bringing LTE-Advanced mobile service, which could double existing speeds. Critics, however, have said prices are likely to rise now that low-cost MTS has been swallowed up.

As part of the takeover deal approved by regulators, more than 100,000 MTS wireless customers are being sold to Telus. Cope said both companies will be vying to keep or regain their customers.

"Once customers have moved to where they're going to be, then it's an open market and it'll be a competitive market."