Pay-TV
firm Sky is launching a mobile phone service next year in partnership with O2's
Spanish parent Telefonica.
Sky will use
Telefonica UK's wireless network, enabling the satellite broadcaster to offer
mobile voice and data services for the first time.
It takes Sky into
the battle for "quad play", adding mobile to its existing services of
internet, landline and TV.
Offering all four
services is seen as the next big UK growth area for telecoms firms and
broadcasters.
Such bundled
services are already popular in much of mainland Europe
"Sky has a
proven ability to launch new services, at scale," said Jeremy Darroch, the
company's chief executive.
The UK's telecoms
market has seen several deals in recent months, and Telefonica is in talks to
sell its O2 business to Hutchison Whampoa for about £10bn. Meanwhile, BT, the
UK's largest fixed-line provider, is talks to buy the UK's biggest mobile
operator, EE, for £12.5bn.
Sky, 39%-owned by
Rupert Murdoch's 21st Century Fox, is present in more than 10 million homes and
has been successful in cross-selling services.
Sky already offers
Sky Go, which enables customers to watch Sky programmes across a number of
devices.
The latest
announcement will not affect Sky's existing tie-up with Vodafone allowing
customers to access Sky Sports or Sky's pay-as-you-go NowTV service.
Last year Sky
changed its name from BSkyB after it completed the acquisition of Sky Italia
and a majority interest in Sky Deutschland. The enlarged company now serves 20
million customers in three of Europe's four biggest markets.
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