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UK says Royal Mail delivery obligation 'unsustainable'
An obligation that Royal Mail delivers letters six days per week risks becoming "unsustainable", a UK regulator said Wednesday as it proposed less frequent service.
Communications watchdog Ofcom proposed that the former state-monopoly cut delivery to five days, or even three days per week, potentially saving the company hundreds of millions of pounds.
Its conclusions followed a report last year by British MPs that showed Royal Mail had "systemically failed" to meet its delivery requirement, as it prioritises parcels in the age of the internet.
Ofcom on Wednesday said "the universal postal service risks becoming unsustainable as people send fewer letters and receive more parcels, meaning reform is necessary to secure... long-term future" of the postal operator set up more than 500 years ago.
The regulator proposed "reducing the number of letter delivery days in the service from six to five or three", adding that this "would require government and parliament to change primary legislation".
Ofcom estimated that Royal Mail could save up to £200 million ($255 million) if deliveries of letters were reduced to five days -- and as much as £650 million for a reduction to three days.
The watchdog noted that other European countries had reduced the frequency of delivery or extended delivery times for letters -- including Sweden in 2018, Belgium twice since 2020, and Norway and Denmark twice each since 2016.
Ofcom will consult on its proposals, which include also suggestions on prices paid to send letters, before providing an update in the summer.
- 'Letters halved' -
"Postal workers are part of the fabric of our society and are critical to communities up and down the country," Ofcom chief executive Melanie Dawes said Wednesday.
"But we're sending half as many letters as we did in 2011, and receiving many more parcels. The universal service hasn't changed since then, it's getting out of date and will become unsustainable if we don't take action," she added.
Royal Mail's universal service obligation (USO) stipulates that it must deliver letters six days a week to all 32 million addresses in the UK for the price of a stamp.
A first class stamp costs £1.25 and should guarantee next-day UK delivery for a letter, although the target is not always met.
A second class stamp, costing 75 pence, means a letter should arrive within three days.
W.Stewart--AT