EGBA RESPONSIBLE GAMBLING STANDARDS ARE TOPS
7 November 2008
Online gaming and betting: EU private industry
leads in first ever benchmark study on responsible
gambling practices
The online gambling trade association European Gaming
and Betting Association has announced the results of an
independent study carried out by standards and player
protection body eCOGRA, revealing that 67 percent of the
consumer facing responsible gaming standards implemented
by EGBA members match or exceed those applied by 10 of
Europe’s largest gambling monopolies.
The EGBA is a non-profit body that includes leading
European gaming and betting operators such as Bet-at-home.com,
bwin, Digibet, Carmen Media Group, Expekt, Interwetten,
PartyGaming and Unibet among its members and is based in
Brussels.
The results of the eCOGRA study show that:
* 43 percent of the standards applied by the private
operators match those of the gambling monopolies;
* 24 percent exceed those of the monopolies;
* Only 4 percent of the standards applied by the private
sector are deemed to be lower than those of the
monopolies;
* The remaining standards could not be benchmarked
against those of the monopolies either because of
insufficient information/lack of accessibility (21
percent) or inapplicability (8 percent)
Sigrid Ligné, Secretary General of the EGBA said that in
a fast changing online environment, rigorous monitoring
of the best existing practice is essential so as to
allow a continuous process of updates and improvements.
In this context, in May 2008 the EGBA appointed eCOGRA
to carry out a study that would benchmark some of
Europe’s leading gambling monopolies against the EGBA’s
own standards governing consumer protection, security
and social responsibility that it requires all of its
members to meet.
She said that EGBA welcomes the results of the study,
which provides the first ever fact-based and comparative
assessment of the practices in place at both private
sector operators as well as those of government
controlled monopolies.
“This study shows us that there are lessons to be
learned by both the monopolies as well as the private
sector," said Ligné. "However, it also clearly dismisses
the argument that private sector companies are failing
to provide consumers with similar levels of protection
and responsible gaming practices.
"In fact the evidence shows that it is the private
sector that is leading the field in this important area
and results are a testament to the major commitment and
strong leadership of EGBA operators towards developing a
comprehensive and consistent package of responsible
gaming practices”.
At a time when responsible gaming is at the heart of
political discussions in Europe, eCOGRA’s study gives
clear evidence that two thirds of the consumer facing
tools and practices in place at EGBA members offer best
practice protections that either match or exceed those
offered by the monopolies.
It also shows the need for improved transparency as 21
percent of the standards could not be benchmarked due to
either insufficient information being available on the
exact equivalent practices of the monopolies or the fact
that they were not accessible.
Ligné added: “I am confident that this study will
improve the understanding of all stakeholders throughout
Europe on the important issue of consumer protection and
responsible gaming. From now on, it will provide a
valuable reference for those making political decisions
about the future of online gaming at EU as well as at a
national level”.
Andrew Beveridge, CEO of eCOGRA added: “Self-regulation
in the online gaming sector is an important tool and
greatly complements formal regulation. Legislators
should seek to draw upon the considerable and effective
efforts made by the private sector and promote similar
initiatives throughout the EU”.
EGBA promotes the right of private gaming and betting
operators that are regulated and licensed in one Member
State to a fair market access throughout the European
Union. Online gaming and betting is a fast growing
market, but will remain for the next decades a
negligible part of the overall European gaming market in
which the traditional land-based offer is expected to
grow from Euro 80 billion GGR in 2007 to Euro 95 billion
GGR in 2012, thus keeping the lion’s share with 90,6
percent of the market.
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
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