An EU-level authorisation regime for satellite services, a new EU access product, a voluntary “conciliation process” on IP interconnection disputes and a focus on network resilience are among the main innovations proposed by the European Commission.
The Commission published a draft regulation on a Digital Networks Act (DNA) on 21 January 2026. It contains several substantial changes compared with the version which was leaked a week ago.
The DNA, once adopted, will replace the current directive on a European Electronic Communications Code (EECC). It will also replace other aspects of EU telecoms regulations, such as the Open Internet Regulation, the 2018 BEREC Regulation, the Radio Spectrum Policy Programme (RSPP) and parts of the e-Privacy Directive (Digital Economy).
In conjunction with its DNA proposal, the Commission published its evaluations of the EECC, BEREC and the BEREC Office and the delegated regulation on EU-wide wholesale voice termination rates.
Cullen International's 'Flash' report gives a high-level overview of the main elements of the draft DNA. Cullen International will follow up with additional detailed analyses.
For more information and to read the full report, please click on “Access the full content” - or on “Request full report”, in case you are not subscribed to our European Telecoms service.
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02 February 26
Digital Networks Act: texts comparison in the Cullen Legislation Navigator
Cullen International has updated its Legislation Navigator with the official text of the proposed Digital Networks Act (DNA). It allows easy browsing through the 416 recitals, 210 articles, 50 definitions and 6 annexes proposed.
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The DNA explained: general authorisation with a single passport notification under fully harmonised conditions
Cullen International is issuing a series of analyses on different aspects of the Digital Networks Act (DNA) proposal. This report covers the general authorisation regime.
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Global trends in digital policies and regulations to watch in 2026
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