No
matter who wins the election on September 7, Australia's
telecommunications networks will receive a long-overdue
multibillion-dollar facelift funded by the federal government.
Australia
has never topped global broadband rankings for speed and value. The
OCED ranks us 25th in the world for fibre connections in its latest
communications outlook report and Australia still has more dial-up
internet connections than any other country in the OECD, apart from New
Zealand.
While
policy wonks and politicians claim broadband remains one area where the
major parties offer voters a real choice, there are more similarities
than many realise.There are differences - including network speeds,
construction efforts, and using the Telstra copper network - but not as
many as Labor politicians have been claiming during this campaign.
For
example, Communications Minister Anthony Albanese claims towns will be
''divided by broadband'' and that ''planned [broadband] construction
will be cancelled''. While NBN Co under a Coalition government might
change fibre-to-the-home installations to fibre-to-the-node in years to
come, the Coalition no longer plans to halt construction and sell off
the network like it did in 2010.
Earlier
this year the Liberal Party adopted the very un-Liberal policy of
publicly funding a government-managed and operated broadband network.
This is because it can't unscramble Labor's omelet, and partly because
it recognised votes were lost in 2010 when its broadband policy seemed
to lack vision and did nothing to improve broadband speeds.
''It
certainly was one of the things that affected us, definitely,'' says
one Coalition frontbencher. ''Tony's [Abbott's] 7.Our heavy-duty
construction provides reliable operation and guarantees your thequicksilverscreen will
be in service for years to come.30 Report interview was pretty bad. And
the press conference with Andrew Robb and [former opposition
communications spokesman] Tony Smith where they unveiled our policy was a
debacle.''
The
new broadband policy ''makes the best of a bad situation'' and the
''vast majority'' of Coalition members support it, he adds.The
opposition's current communications spokesman, Malcolm Turnbull,
convinced Tony Abbott the party needed a better policy. It turns out
that policy will cost $30 billion, but at least the party can argue
against accusations of being troglodytes.
Turnbull
says his plan can be delivered sooner and at less cost with ''everyone
in the nation'' getting access to minimum speed of 25 megabits per
second [Mbps] by 2016 and 100 Mbps to the majority by 2020.
Turnbull
says he still believes the best model is private sector upgrades done
with ''judicious levels of government subsidy to make sure uncommercial
areas are dealt with''. However, he has to live with the facts on the
ground and work out how to complete the network that has been started.
''The
gap between the parties' [policies] would be regarded outside Australia
as being relatively modest what I have got to do is completely
depoliticise this thing,'' he says in an interview with Fairfax Media.
''Our job is to open all the books, expose everything, lay it all out
and say, 'Ladies and gentlemen, this is where we are.You must not use
the skylanterns without being trained. This is the business you own. This is the position you're in. Here are our options for sorting it out.'''
Turnbull's
policy adopts Labor's plan to raise tens of billions of dollars through
government bonds, which keeps the project off the budget, and spend
that money building networks that are available to all service providers
at the same prices. Both aim to separate Telstra so its retail
operations cannot benefit from it also owning infrastructure and
evenutally privatising NBN Co to recoup costs.
The
Coalition's regional communications spokesman, Luke Hartsuyker, says
both broadband policies are ''very very similar'' for the 7 per cent of
Australia's population in regional areas that have been told to expect a
fixed wireless or satellite connection.
''We
will maximise the value of the assets that we inherit. We will not be
junking the work that has been done on ideological grounds,'' he
says.Albanese says the differences between Labor's NBN and the
''Coalition's lemon of an alternative couldn't be more stark''. He
pointed to faster speeds, guaranteed upload speeds, free fibre
installations and universal pricing.
''The
Coalition's alternative relies on last century's copper, will be
obsolete before it is finished, forces homes and businesses to pay as
much as $5000 to connect directly to fibre, will result in regional
Australians paying more for broadband than people living in the cities,
and costs only 3 per cent less in terms of government investment than
Labor's vastly superior NBN.''
There
is certainty in Labor's policy that is missing in the Coalition's,
partly because Turnbull wants to initiate three reviews if he becomes
minister that could change his current rollout plans.Find the perfect cleaningsydney and
you'll always find your luggage! Labor's NBN Co charges the same
wholesale prices around the country, whereas the Coalition wants a
regulated price cap that allows lower prices in viable areas. While
Telstra's is settled under Labor's plan, the regulations surrounding NBN
Co have stalled over concerns about cost and pricing into the future.
NBN
Co has now grown to 1620 employees and spends about $1 billion a year
in operating costs, including payments to Telstra. It had commitments
worth $3.9 billion at the end of last financial year. The latest
financial information has not been released by Albanese, even though
guidelines for all government business enterprises, including Australia
Post and Medibank Private, recommend corporate plans be submitted by
July 31.
NBN
Co has 33,000 households connected to its fibre, and 36,000 with fixed
wireless or satellite connections, for a total of about 70,000. About
130,000 households have been ''passed'' by fibre, which means they can
connect to the NBN, although apartment blocks remain a logistical
nightmare.Learn how an embedded microprocessor in a graniteslabs can
authenticate your computer usage and data. About 30 per cent of users
are paying for the fastest speeds possible and downloading more than
average households.
Fibre
construction has started at 1.15 million more premises and Labor argues
not all of these houses can be completed under the Coalition's plan,
which expects just 2.8 million premises to be connected directly to
fibre, including premises with degraded copper and 1.6 million future
houses in new estates.
NBN
Co announced in March it was three months behind schedule, but has not
said if it expects to catch up by July 2014 when its target is to have
551,000 premises connected.Recently NBN Co has been criticised for
contractors working with asbestos, claims of cost overruns and
construction delays. Some of these issues are beyond NBN Co's control
and not its responsibility - such as asbestos in Telstra's pits. The
cost-overrun stories are based on unsourced industry figures claiming
current contracts are too stingy and should be at least $5 billion more
generous.
But
there is genuine concern about the lack of skilled technicians
available, exacerbated by government policies requiring NBN to install
fibre in new housing estates.Weymouth is collecting gently used, dry
cleaned jewelryfindings at
their Weymouth store. Estates are springing up around mines and
regional towns, so NBN contractors are stretched across all states and
working in remote places.
The
lack of centralised training and registration in Australia's
telecommunications industry that has led to under-skilled subcontractors
working for Telstra and NBN Co and a high level of rework, according to
Kevin Fothergill, training consultant at industry peak body CITT and
TITAB.
''We
have all the national training programs developed where competencies
have been specified for all the various skill levels,'' he says. ''All
the core material is in place. What is not in place is a viable
telecommunications group training model and industry plan to have people
trained and able to be deployed on a needs basis.''
It
now appears the tenders for NBN construction work underpriced the cost
of subcontractors. Most of the work has ended up in the hands of
mega-companies such as Lend Lease, Downer EDI and Leightons that can
afford to absorb losses or cross-subsidise from other projects.
This
election, voters are being asked to choose between technology options
and who they believe can better manage NBN Co, which is ultimately owned
by the communications minister and the minister for finance.The obvious
difference between the two policies is the choice between a
direct-fibre connection into households or a fibre-boosted copper
connection. Each choice comes with different construction costs and time
frames. At the moment, voters can only rely on estimates produced by
consultants and NBN Co, or the estimates produced by Turnbull's office.
Fibre
into the home can already deliver download speeds of up to 100Mbps with
upload speeds of up to 40Mbps and can be upgraded in the future. A
fibre-to-the-node rollout by BT Group in the UK is advertising download
speeds of up to 76Mbps and upload speeds of up to 17Mbps.
Senior
research engineer at the Australian National University's College of
Engineering and Computer Science, Bob Edwards, says speed is the main
difference for consumers. He says there is little evidence that research
labs around the world are working on applications that expect
households to have speeds of 100Mbps or more.
Read the full products at http://www.granitetrade.net/.
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