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Parliamentary Joint Committee on National Broadband Network
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Preliminary pages
Chair’s
Foreword
This is the First
Report of the Joint Committee on the National Broadband Network, one of the
largest committees in Australian parliamentary history, with currently 57
participating and full voting members. The sizeable membership of the committee
demonstrates the commitment to better information communication technology
(ICT) for all Australians amongst parliamentary colleagues, as well as a high
degree of political interest in the National Broadband Network (NBN) more
specifically.
There is a broad consensus in both the Parliament and the
community on the importance of better ICT. A recent report by Deloitte Access
Economics titled The Connected Continent: How the internet is transforming
the Australian economy found that the direct contribution of the internet
to the Australian economy “is set to increase by $20 billion over the next five
years from $50 billion to roughly $70 billion.” The report estimates that
approximately 80 000 more Australians will be employed in areas directly
related to the internet as a result.[1]
How to deliver better ICT is a hotly contested issue and one
of the political divides of the moment. With this in mind, this committee has
worked hard to focus on its parliamentary oversight responsibility of the
rollout of the NBN, and to emphasise that it is not a “clearing house” for
policy differences. I thank all Members of the committee for respecting the
role that we have as a committee.
The committee is guided by three basic documents in the
performance of its oversight and scrutiny role of the NBN. These are the:
- Government commissioned NBN Implementation Study, dated 6
May 2010;
- NBN Co Corporate Plan 2010-2013, dated 17 December 2010;
and
- Government’s Statement of Expectations for NBN Co, dated
17 December 2010 (issued on behalf of the Government by the Shareholder Ministers,
Senator the Hon Stephen Conroy, Minister for Broadband, Communications and the
Digital Economy and Senator the Hon Penny Wong, Minister for Finance and
Deregulation).
These key documents are available at:
www.nbnco.com.au/assets/documents/nbn-co-3-year-gbe-corporate-plan-final-17-dec-10.pdf
www.dbcde.gov.au/broadband/national_broadband_network/national_broadband_network_implementation_study
These documents need to be read alongside the ongoing work
schedule for the NBN. To understand the time flow, the committee has included a
diagram from the NBN Co Corporate Plan in Figure 2.7.
In its next review period, the committee intends to pursue a
number of issues raised in these foundation documents, including when and how
private equity will be engaged in the wholesale platform.
Many Australians are under the misconception that NBN Co is
building a Government-owned monopoly to own and run the wholesale platform at
taxpayers’ expense, indefinitely, with no return to the Government on its very
large initial capital expenditure. This is an incorrect assessment of what the
final product will look like, and what the true return to the taxpayer really
is. The end product will, more than likely, be a privately-owned and operated
wholesale platform, with a return on revenue through engagement with retail
providers as the platform is built, and then the opportunity for a significant
private sale once the NBN is complete.
As a consequence, a very important question the committee
will be pursuing is the question of when and how private equity and finance
will be engaged in the wholesale platform, and at what financial return to
Government, and ultimately taxpayers. The political debate is obscuring the fact
that what is being built will be an asset on the financial books of the
taxpayer. And as with all assets - everything from a house to a business
investment - if it is built efficiently and effectively, and if private equity
is engaged in the right way at the right time, an initial spend can lead to a
much larger return in the future. With that in mind, this report flags that
this committee will be exploring this question further: the committee will
seek to satisfy itself about the Government’s view of where the points of entry
are for private investment alongside public investment, and to make sure
maximum return on the Government’s investment is secured on behalf of Australian
taxpayers.
Recommendation 4 reflects this intent, by calling on the
Government to publish a detailed statement outlining the productivity, jobs and
competitive benefits of the impact of the NBN on competition (at the wholesale
and retail levels) including the impact of the Australian Competition and
Consumer Commission’s ruling to increase the number of points of interconnect
for the NBN from 14 to 121.
In terms of performance scrutiny, if the committee is to
properly provide parliamentary oversight of the NBN it needs to have at hand
some agreed Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) and measures to examine. The
committee was expecting to have received these by its mandated reporting date
of 31 August 2011, so that it could report against them.
On 7 July 2011, the Shareholder Ministers wrote to the
committee advising that these performance measures will be provided by mid
September 2011. This timing is unfortunate because it means the committee is
unable to report against NBN rollout performance in its First Report. The
committee asks for this performance information to be provided as a matter of
priority and in future, in a timely manner to allow full and more adequate
parliamentary oversight of Australia’s largest infrastructure project.
When the range of performance indicators are finalised by
the Department of Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy together
with the NBN Co, the committee will be seeking a biannual report on these KPIs
so that it can report against these agreed measurements. Some committee Members
were keen for the committee to be given quarterly or monthly reports from NBN
Co, arguing the committee is akin to a board of directors. The majority of
committee Members, however, recognised that the committee is not a board of
directors and that its parliamentary oversight role is broader; and its
reporting requirements are twice yearly, as a consequence, performance measure
reporting by NBN Co should be likewise.
Recommendation 1 therefore calls on the Government and the NBN
Co to provide the committee with NBN rollout progress reports every six months,
no later than three months before the committee is due to report to the
Parliament.
In the absence of a formal performance reporting document,
the committee has relied on the public hearing evidence of 5 July 2011 from NBN
Co CEO, Mr Mike Quigley. At the hearing Mr Quigley reported to the
committee that as at the end of June 2011, the NBN Co had passed some 14 256
Brownfields premises (more than the 13 000 forecast in the NBN Co Corporate
Plan). Mr Quigley added that the interim satellite service was launched on 1
July 2011 which is expected to cover some 200 000 premises (more than the 165 000
forecast in the NBN Co Corporate Plan). However, progress with Greenfields sites
has been delayed, due to the policy discussions and the need to ‘bed-down’
legislative amendments in the first half of 2011.[2]
Based on Mr Quigley’s statements, NBN Co has exceeded
several performance targets as per the schedule on page 15 of the NBN Co
Corporate Plan. However, as previously stated, the committee is very keen to
have a broader set of KPIs and measures made available to it, to enable it to
provide proper oversight of the NBN rollout, so that issues in the NBN Co Corporate
Plan, the Government’s Statement of Expectations, and related issues (i.e. Workforce
issues) can receive further scrutiny.
A final theme to emerge in evidence received to date is the
question of just how “NBN ready” Government and its agencies are. This was also
a key theme of the recent report about the role and potential of the NBN by the
House of Representatives Infrastructure and Communications Committee titled Broadening
the Debate (tabled in the Parliament on 25 August 2011). This committee
agrees with its Infrastructure and Communications committee colleagues on this
consideration.
While the focus of many has been on a nine-year, complex
engineering build of the NBN or on the size of the capital expenditure for the
NBN, a number of critical, secondary policy considerations need to be
prioritised by the Government for the NBN to deliver maximum value. Many of
these were addressed in the Infrastructure and Communications Committee’s
report and will continue to be pursued by this committee. These include issues
such as: Australian content and copyright law, individual privacy and national
security, taxation administration, Government use of the internet, and timely
and relevant data collection opportunities.
The committee’s Resolution of Appointment requires it to
report once only this year, by 31 August 2011. Due to the full range of issues,
including the many mentioned above, the committee will again report to the
Parliament before the end of the year. The second report will examine the
agreed performance information pending from the Government, further work on private
sector engagement for the NBN in both the wholesale and retail sectors,
workforce issues, and the NBN-readiness of Government generally. As well, with
several critical agreements due to be resolved in the coming months– such as
the NBN Co agreement with Telstra which is expected to go to Telstra
shareholders on 18 October– the committee can address these matters in more
detail.
I thank the Secretariat for their work to date on what is a
very challenging public policy oversight role. And once again, I thank all
committee Members for, above all else, focusing on Australia’s need for speed
in the development of ICT over and above all other policy or political
considerations.
Robert Oakeshott MP
Chair
Committee Membership
Chair
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Mr Robert Oakeshott MP
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Deputy
Chair
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Mrs Yvette D’Ath MP
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Members
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Mr Paul Fletcher MP
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Senator Simon Birmingham
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Mr Luke Hartsuyker MP
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Senator Carol Brown
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Mr Ed Husic MP
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Senator Doug Cameron
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Hon Sussan Ley MP
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Senator Mary Jo Fisher
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Ms Michelle Rowland MP
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Senator Scott Ludlam
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Mr Mike Symon MP
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Senator the Hon Ian Macdonald
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Hon Malcolm Turnbull MP
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Senator the Hon Ursula Stephens
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Participating
Members
Senator the Hon Eric Abetz |
Senator Steve Hutchins (from
24.3.2011 until 30.6.2011) |
Senator Judith Adams |
Senator the Hon David Johnston |
Senator Chris Back |
Senator Barnaby Joyce |
Senator Guy Barnett (until
30.6.2011) |
Senator Helen Kroger |
Senator Cory Bernardi |
Senator Gavin Marshall (from
24.3.2011) |
Senator Catryna Bilyk (from
24.3.2011) |
Senator the Hon Brett Mason |
Senator Mark Bishop (from
24.3.2011) |
Senator Anne McEwan (from
24.3.2011) |
Senator the Hon Ronald Boswell |
Senator Julian McGauran (until
30.6.2011) |
Senator Sue Boyce |
Senator the Hon Nick Minchin (until
30.6.2011) |
Senator the Hon George Brandis SC |
Senator Claire Moore (from
24.3.2011) |
Senator David Bushby |
Senator Fiona Nash |
Senator Michaelia Cash |
Mr Paul Neville MP (from 10.5.2011) |
Senator the Hon Richard Colbeck |
Senator Kerry O’Brien (from
24.3.2011 until 30.6.2011) |
Senator the Hon Helen Coonan (until
22.8.2011) |
Senator Stephen Parry |
Senator Mathias Cormann |
Senator Marise Payne |
Senator Trish Crossin (from
24.3.2011) |
Senator Helen Polley (from
24.3.2011) |
Senator Alan Eggleston |
Senator Louise Pratt (from
24.3.2011) |
Senator the Hon John Faulkner (from
24.3.2011) |
Senator the Hon Michael Ronaldson |
Senator the Hon Alan Ferguson (until
30.6.2011) |
Senator Scott Ryan |
Senator Concetta Fierravanti-Wells |
Hon Bruce Scott MP (from
26.5.2011) |
Senator Mitch Fifield |
Senator the Hon Nigel Scullion |
Senator Michael Forshaw (from
24.3.2011 until 30.6.2011) |
Senator Glenn Sterle (from
24.3.2011) |
Senator Mark Furner (from
24.3.2011) |
Senator the Hon Judith Troeth (until
30.6.2011) |
Senator the Hon Bill Heffernan |
Senator Russell Trood (until
30.6.2011) |
Senator Gary Humphries |
Senator John Williams |
Senator Annette Hurley (from
24.3.2011 until 30.6.2011) |
Senator Dana Wortley (from
24.3.2011 until 30.6.2011) |
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Senator Nick Xenophon |
Committee Secretariat
Committee
Secretary
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Mr Peter Stephens
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Inquiry
Secretary
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Ms Stephanie Mikac
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Principal
Research Officer
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Dr Bill Pender
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Terms of Reference
The resolution of appointment
establishing the Joint Committee on the National Broadband Network was passed
by the House of Representatives on 1 March 2011 and by the Senate on 3 March
2011 and provides:
(1)That
a Joint Committee on the National Broadband Network be appointed to inquire
into and report on the rollout of the National Broadband Network (NBN);
(2)
That every six
months, commencing 31 August 2011, until the NBN is complete and operational, the
committee provide progress reports to both Houses of Parliament and to
shareholder Ministers on:
The rollout of
the NBN, including in relation to the Government’s objective for NBN Co Limited
(NBN Co) to:
(i) connect 93 per
cent of Australian homes, schools and businesses with fibre-to-the premises
technology providing broadband speeds of up to 100 megabits per second, with a
minimum fibre coverage obligation of 90 per cent of Australian premises; and
(ii) service all
remaining premises by a combination of next-generation fixed wireless and
satellite technologies providing peak speeds of at least 12 megabits per
second;
(b)The achievement
of take-up targets (including premises passed and covered and services activated)
as set out in NBN Co’s Corporate Plan released on 20 December 2010 as
revised from time to time;
(c) Network rollout
performance including service levels and faults;
(d)
The
effectiveness of NBN Co in meeting its obligations as set out in its
Stakeholder Charter;
(e)
NBN Co’s
strategy for engaging with consumers and handling complaints;
(f) NBN Co’s risk
management processes; and
(g)Any other matter
pertaining to the NBN rollout that the committee considers relevant.
List of Abbreviations
ACCC
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Australian Competition and
Consumer Commission
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ACMA
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Australian Communications and
Media Authority
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ACT
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Australian Capital Territory
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BOT
|
Build-Operate-Transfer
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committee
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Joint Committee on the National
Broadband Network
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CAC ACT
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Commonwealth Authorities and
Companies Act 1997
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CAN
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Customer Access Network
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CEO
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Chief Executive Officer
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CSO
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Community Service Obligations
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CVC
|
Customer Virtual Circuit
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Cwlth
|
Commonwealth
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DBCDE
|
Department of Broadband,
Communications and the Digital Economy
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EPOS
|
Electronic Point of Sale
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Fibre Deployment Bill
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Telecommunications Legislation
Amendment (Fibre Deployment) Bill 2011
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FMA Act
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Financial Management and
Accountability Act 1997
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GBE
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Government Business Enterprise
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HFC
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Hybrid Fibre Coaxial
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ISP
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Internet Service Provider
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KPI
|
Key Performance Indicator
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FTTN
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Fibre-to-the-Node
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FTTP
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Fibre-to-the-Premise
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Mbps
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Megabits per second
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NBN Co
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NBN Co Limited
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NBN
|
National Broadband Network
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NSW
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New South Wales
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PC
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Productivity Commission
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POAAL
|
Post Office Agents Association
Limited
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POI
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Points of Interconnect
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RBBP
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Regional Backbone Blackspots
Program
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RDS Far West NSW
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Regional Development Australia
Far West New South Wales
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RFDS
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Royal Flying Doctor Service
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RSP
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Retail Service Provider
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SAU
|
Special Access Undertaking
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SoE
|
Government’s Statement of
Expectations
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USO
|
Universal Service Obligations
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WBA
|
Wholesale Broadband Agreement
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Recommendations
1 Reporting on the Rollout of the National Broadband Network
Recommendation 1
The committee recommends that the NBN Co together with the
Department of Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy, commencing for
the first quarter 2011-2012, provide a six-monthly report on the progress of
the rollout of the National Broadband Network, using established Key
Performance Indicators and performance measures, no later than three months before
the committee is due to report to the Parliament.
2 Rollout of the National Broadband Network
Recommendation 2
The committee recommends that Government agencies take
measures to ensure they are ready for the rollout of the National Broadband
Network (NBN), prior to receiving and working with the NBN for service
delivery.
Recommendation 3
The committee recommends that NBN Co Limited publish a
detailed account of impacts on timing and cost of the National Broadband
Network as a result of the time taken and resources used to complete the
Binding Definitive Agreements between NBN Co and Telstra and NBN Co and
Optus, and the decision to increase the number of Points of Interconnect from
14 to 121.
Recommendation 4
The committee recommends that the Minister for Broadband,
Communications and the Digital Economy publish a detailed statement outlining
the productivity, jobs and competitive benefits of:
- the
overall rollout of the National Broadband Network for the cost-efficient
provision of basic broadband infrastructure for all Australians;
- how
competitive markets will operate at the wholesale and retail levels, with
particular reference to the impact on small, existing internet service
providers and other fibre deployment companies; and
- the
impact on wholesale and retail competition of the increase of the Points of
Interconnect from 14 to 121.
Recommendation 5
The committee recommends that NBN Co:
- publish
timeframes for the rollout of National Broadband Network (NBN) services to
regional and remote areas and communicate these to the areas to which they
apply;
- investigate
the impact of the transition to the NBN on currently available levels of
service for satellite technology; and
- taking
into consideration findings of this investigation, formulate contingency plans
against potential reduction of capacity in regional and remote areas as a
consequence of the NBN rollout, if required.
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