Autoridade Nacional de Comunicações

Autoridade Nacional de Comunicações (ANACOM) is Portugal's national regulatory authority for the communications sector, for the purposes of relevant Community and national legislation, including electronic communications and postal services. ANACOM also advises and assists the Portuguese Government in sector matters, while retaining its status as an independent administrative entity, with administrative, financial and management autonomy and its own assets.

Autoridade Nacional de Comunicações
Organization
Legal natureRegulatory authority
AssignmentsRegulation, supervision and representation of the electronic communications and postal sector
DependencyGoverno de Portugal Ministérios das Infraestruturas e Habitação
ChairmanJoão Cadete de Matos
Local
JurisdictionPortugal
Head OfficeLisboa
History
Formed1989 [1]
Website
www.anacom.pt
Footnotes
(1) as the Instituto das Comunicações de Portugal

ANACOM's main tasks are to promote competition in the provision of communications networks and services, ensure transparency in prices and in the conditions governing the use of services and provide efficient management of the radio spectrum. ANACOM is also responsible for supporting the development of markets and of electronic and postal communications networks, for protecting the rights and interests of citizens, and providing Portuguese representation at international bodies relevant to the sector.

ANACOM has its origins in Instituto das Comunicações de Portugal (ICP), which began its activity in 1989 and changed its name to ICP - Autoridade Nacional de Comunicações (ICP-ANACOM) in 2002. The current statutes of ANACOM entered into force in 2015, following approval of the Framework Law of Regulatory Bodies (Framework law for independent administrative entities with functions regulating the economic activity of the private, public and cooperative sector).

The Chair of ANACOM's Board of Directors is João Cadete de Matos (appointed in August 2017).

Prior Presidents

  • Fernando Mendes
  • Luís Nazaré
  • Álvaro Dâmaso
  • Pedro Duarte Neves
  • José Manuel Amado da Silva
  • Fátima Barros
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gollark: Doesn't that just mean even MORE fuzziness and admin-discretion than the at least somewhat specific rules here?
gollark: So, "leave you live" is technically valid if you treat "live" as an adjective meaning "alive", but it's an odd form.
gollark: Probably not the intention?
gollark: Wait, that actually does work, it's just weird.
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