Chapter 5
Broadband Quality and Availability
5.1
In September 2013 the government asked the Department of Communications
to prepare a report on broadband availability and quality. A national summary
report on broadband infrastructure and performance was released by the Minister
for Communications, the Hon Malcolm Turnbull MP, on 23 December 2013.[1]
It was intended to be the first release of material providing a snapshot of
broadband availability and quality. The department indicated that it would
refine the detail of its analysis and compile maps which would be published
along with the methodology used.
5.2
The final Broadband Availability and Quality Report (the report), which
included maps to provide consumers with the opportunity to search the results
for their local area, was released on 20 February 2014 along with the department's
'MyBroadband' website.[2]
At the committee's public hearing on 12 March 2014, NBN Co confirmed that data
from the MyBroadband website would inform the proposed rollout plan for underserved
areas.[3]
5.3
The department later confirmed that the total cost incurred for the
broadband quality project as at 23 October 2014 was $302,460 (GST inclusive).
Most of this cost went on website development ($97,453), website hosting
($130,607) and the Google Maps license ($46,200).[4]
5.4
This chapter summarises the key findings of the report; discusses a
number of concerns raised in evidence about the accuracy and reliability of
information included in the report and on the department's MyBroadband website;
and contains the committee's view.
Purpose and methodology of the report
5.5
In opposition, Malcolm Turnbull was often critical of the rollout
schedule of the NBN (which was determined by a number of engineering factors,
including the location of necessary infrastructure, and the agreement with the
regional independents to prioritise regional areas). In its 2013 election
policy, the Coalition said:
Within 90 days the Department of Broadband Communications and
the Digital Economy, with the assistance of NBN Co and private carriers, will
provide Parliament with a ranking of broadband quality and availability in all
areas of Australia. This ranking will be published for comment and review and
will guide prioritisation of the rollout.[5]
5.6
The report is based on a spatial analysis of the coverage of broadband
customer access networks, along with an estimate of their likely performance
using known constraints. The analysis considered three categories of broadband
delivery separately: fixed broadband (including FTTP, FTTN, ADSL, HFC and fixed
wireless), mobile broadband (3G and 4G) and satellite broadband. The main
purpose of the analysis was to describe broadband access across Australia and
identify areas with poor broadband services. The analysis which informed the
report represented a snapshot of broadband access as at December 2013. It
consisted of extensive datasets which were provided by a range of
telecommunications carriers. The report stated:
The Strategic Review included estimated costs to allow for
areas with poorer current broadband service to be prioritised. It assumed
prioritisation will take into account reasonable operational efficiency
considerations, such as needing to rollout in contiguous work fronts and
dealing with an area as a whole.[6]
5.7
In response to a question at an additional estimates hearing of the
Environment and Communications Legislation Committee in February 2014, Mr Clarke,
Secretary of the Department of Communications, told the committee that the
purpose of the report:
...is to provide an assessment of broadband availability and
quality at a level of granularity—spatial resolution, if you like—that is
suitable to inform the company's prioritisation in the rollout. The
website...supports that by providing a more accessible version for the public to
also view what our assessment concluded in the areas in which they live.[7]
5.8
Mr Clarke further told the committee that the department was exploring a
number of options to update the report and website as new broadband
infrastructure was built:
The options that we are looking at closely now are, first, to
add a capacity for people to measure their actual broadband experience—the
speed test, if you will—and to send that information back through the website
to the department so that we get data points on actual user experience...[8]
5.9
The analysis of broadband in the report was based on a spatial model
incorporating the coverage of the fixed technologies that deliver broadband
services, in combination with factors that may constrain access to a service or
affect the quality of a service. The report noted that the modelling approach
was designed following a review of similar projects conducted in the United
Kingdom, the United States, Canada, Germany and the European Union.[9]
Findings of the report
5.10
The report made a number of findings in relation to broadband
availability and quality. The executive summary stated that the findings:
...are based on a detailed spatial analysis of the coverage of
broadband customer access networks, along with estimates of their likely
performance given known constraints. This analysis uses the available
information to measure broadband availability in terms of the infrastructure
currently in place. It uses the possible speeds achievable over that
infrastructure to measure quality. This methodology was determined after
references to international experience.
Overall the analysis found that there are areas of inadequate
access to infrastructure across the country—approximately 1.4 million premises
(13 per cent) are in areas where fewer than 40 per cent of premises can access
a fixed broadband service. The premises in this category are typically located in
regional or remote areas of Australia, or in small pockets of poor service in
metropolitan and outer metropolitan areas.[10]
5.11
The executive summary went on to specify the key findings of the
premises level analysis. For broadband availability the findings included:
-
approximately 9.9 million premises (91 per cent) have access to
fixed line broadband services delivered via asymmetric digital subscriber line
(ADSL) technology;
-
approximately 3.1 million premises (28 per cent) have access to a
high speed broadband platform (defined as including fibre to the premises,
fibre to the node, hybrid fibre coaxial and fixed wireless networks);
-
approximately 8.8 million premises (81 per cent) have access to
3G mobile broadband services and about 6.4 million premises (59 per cent) have
access to 4G services; and
-
all Australian premises are covered by satellite broadband,
although there is a ceiling to the capacity of these services and therefore not
all premises can access a service.[11]
5.12
For broadband quality the findings included:
-
approximately 3.1 million premises (28 per cent) have access to
peak download speeds of between 25 megabits per second (Mbps) and 100Mbps;
-
approximately 7.1 million premises (65 per cent) are in areas
that have access to peak median download speeds of less than 24Mbps over the
copper network;
-
about 0.7 million premises (6 per cent) are unable to access a
fixed broadband service; and
-
of premises with access to ADSL broadband services over copper,
about 3.7 million are located in areas with an estimated peak median download speed
of less than 9Mbps, and 920,000 in areas with an estimated peak median download
speed of less than 4.8Mbps.[12]
Issues arising from the report
The #MyBroadbandvReality survey
5.13
As part of its ongoing inquiry, the committee received an important submission
which provided a critical response to the MyBroadband website. The submission collated
information contained in a large survey of people around Australia. Over 800
people participated in the survey in response to Twitter, Facebook and other
social media avenues of promotion. The survey's main purpose was to gather
information about whether the actual internet speeds people were receiving
matched the estimates from the MyBroadband website. The survey also invited
respondents to provide general comments about their internet service and
quality.
5.14
Appearing before the committee on 19 May 2014, one of the submission's
authors, Mr Grosvenor, explained how the survey came about:
A number of people were going to the MyBroadband website and
getting an estimate from there which was saying that they should get
such-and-such a speed or such-and-such a quality of internet service and then,
when they did their own speed test, many of them found that what they actually
got was significantly less than what [the MyBroadband] website was telling
them.[13]
5.15
The submission raised a number of issues critical of the information
contained on the MyBroadband website, including what it regarded to be
significant omissions. It made nine recommendations for the committee to
consider, some of which addressed a range of issues broader than the content of
the MyBroadband website. These included that future discussion about broadband:
-
include the impact of weather and region specific environmental
factors;
-
consider broadband as critical infrastructure like other
essential services such as water and electricity;
-
ensure the broadband network could grow in speed and bandwidth
alongside Australia's broader economy;
-
include the productivity and security risks inherent in the
existing copper network;
-
ensure the publication of an accurate map of existing broadband
infrastructure including realistic equitable options to inform the electorate;
-
include a realistic cost of ongoing legacy network maintenance or
replacement;
-
include a productivity impact of network congestion, in light of
growing population and future home devices;
-
include consideration of equity of internet access; and
-
include regular community feedback.[14]
5.16
The submission's main conclusion was that information published on the
MyBroadband website was inaccurate and misleading. The real-world broadband
speeds experienced by people were significantly lower than the information on
the website was telling them, taking into account ISP and geographical factors:
...for many Australians, the reality of their broadband does
not match the information on the Government's MyBroadband website. Through a
survey and graphing results, we have shown the frustration experienced by
people around the country that they do not have access to reliable and
affordable high-speed internet. We are also concerned that many of our survey
respondents struggled to understand the technical issues related to matters.[15]
Figure 6: #MyBroadbandvReality, Submission 52, p. 3.
>
5.17
The submission included a graph which showed that most participants in
the survey experienced speeds more than 25 per cent lower than the MyBroadband
estimate (see figure 6). The survey results took into consideration two
important qualifying factors:
-
it is likely some lower speed observations are due to a person's
selection of a cheaper internet provider plan, thus producing slower speeds;
and
-
a risk of survey selection bias whereby the results obtained are
overly influenced by the audience selected.[16]
5.18
Mr Grosvenor explained at the hearing that:
...looking at [the graph] as a whole...the majority of
respondents were tending to get only eight megabits per second as their highest
possible speed. Then what you can sort of see visually is that there were very
few people where their actual reality speed was greater than the estimate from
the myBroadband website, and that is the few diamonds that are above that black
diagonal line. Whereas the vast majority tend to be considerably below the
black line and in a lot of cases below the red line even. That red line represents
where your actual speed is only 50 per cent of what the my Broadband estimate
was.[17]
5.19
Mr Grosvenor informed the committee of a second follow-up survey
involving 1000 people that addressed issues not covered by the first survey,
such as asking what people actually used the internet for. Responses showed
that most people were using the internet for banking and paying bills; news and
weather; being socially connected with friends and family by Skype, social
media and email; and watching games, videos and iView. Overall, the follow-up
survey reinforced the main findings of the first survey:
Broadly speaking, it confirmed the same sorts of things that
the first survey did: that actual speeds survey respondents were getting were
significantly less than what the myBroadband website stated they should get.[18]
5.20
At the public hearing, Mr Grosvenor drew the committee's attention to
the first, and most important, recommendation which was that the impact of
weather and regional environmental factors should be considered during any
significant discussion about broadband. Issues raised in evidence by the
#MyBroadbandvReality submission relating to survey data on internet speeds and
the effects of inclement weather on broadband availability and quality are
addressed in more detail in the remaining sections of this chapter.
Conflicting evidence on rollout
priorities
5.21
An issue the committee explored with NBN Co and the Department of
Communications was contradictory policy announcements relating to where the
broadband network would be rolled out first and on what basis a decision would
be made to roll out the NBN to priority areas. In November 2013 the Minister
for Communications made a very public commitment that underserved areas identified
by the department would be prioritised to receive the rollout 'first'. During a
speech to the CommsDay Conference in Sydney on 18 November 2013, the minister
stated:
...up to two million households and businesses across Australia
cannot get basic fixed-line broadband at present. Addressing these
underserviced areas first is a key objective of our NBN policy.
As a priority my Department, with the assistance of NBN Co
and private carriers, will provide the Government and Parliament with a ranking
of broadband quality and availability in all areas of Australia. This ranking
will be published for comment and review and guide future prioritisation of the
rollout.[19]
5.22
However, by December 2013 both NBN Co and the department had qualified
the Minister's remarks by stating that areas of greatest need would receive the
rollout first where it was ‘logistically and commercially viable to do so.’ In
practice, this meant that not all underserved areas would be prioritised in
line with the Minister's April 2013 and November 2013 pledges because—as you would
expect—the many underserved areas in Australia are underserved precisely
because it is not ‘logistically and commercially viable’ for the private sector
to serve them.
5.23
In evidence to the committee's public hearing on 17 December 2013, NBN
Co's Head of Strategy, Mr Rousselot, told the committee that NBN Co was relying
on the department to advise which areas were underserved and, based on the
information, those areas '...would be prioritised in the rollout and therefore
would be completed about 2.5 years earlier than the rest of the population'.[20]
5.24
However, NBN Co Executive Chairman and Chief Executive, Dr Switkowski,
made it clear at the same hearing that an assessment of which areas would be
rolled out 'first' and which areas were 'high priority' were not one and the
same thing:
...we are going to bring [poorly served communities] forward in
the rollout schedule. Does that mean they are the first areas that we will look
at? No, it does not mean that.[21]
5.25
The department's broadband and availability quality report also made it
clear that the scale and location of underserved premises mean that not all of
these premises could be addressed first. NBN Co would need to consider a range
of factors including cost, logistics and reasonable operational efficiency.[22]
5.26
Release of NBN Co's new Statement of Expectations (SoE) by shareholder ministers
in May 2014 and the Corporate Plan 2014–17 by NBN Co in November 2014 provided further
evidence of an incremental watering-down of the Minister's November 2013
commitment to roll out the NBN to underserved areas first. The new SoE included
a range of policy and commercial issues to guide the NBN rollout as it
transitioned from a primarily fibre to the premises (FTTP) model to the multi-technology
mix (MTM) model recommended by the 2013 Strategic Review. One such issue
included that:
NBN Co will prioritise areas identified as poorly served by
the 'Broadband Availability and Quality Report' published by the Department of
Communications in February 2014 (including any subsequent refinements arising
from additional data) to the extent commercially and operationally feasible.[23]
5.27
The SoE also directed NBN Co to include in its 2014–17 corporate plan details
of the approach NBN Co would take to implement an MTM NBN. One of the policy
issues identified was the rollout scheduling and prioritisation of poorly
served areas.
5.28
In response to a written question on notice from an Additional Estimates
hearing in May 2014, NBN Co attempted to put some parameters around the meaning
of 'commercially and operationally feasible' as it related to poorly served or
underserved areas:
Each area is analysed based on the technology available,
delivery capability, and construction costs required to service that area. It
is expected that after an iterative process of analysis and validation, a
proposed set of feasibility rules can be determined.[24]
5.29
The Corporate Plan 2014–17 included a section on 'Prioritisation of
Underserved Areas' as part of its consideration of implementing the strategic
direction of the MTM NBN. It referred to the department's finding that there were
approximately 1.6 million premises in areas which could be categorised as not
having access to adequate broadband services. Most of these areas were located
in regional or remote areas or in small pockets of poor service in metropolitan
and outer-metropolitan areas:
In accordance with the April 2014 Statement of Expectations,
NBN Co's rollout of the MTM will prioritise underserved areas to the extent commercially
and operationally feasible. It is estimated that, overall, the FTTP
construction planned to commence in FY2015 will pass more than the
proportionate amount of underserved Premises in these areas.[25]
5.30
In evidence provided at a public hearing on 11 December 2013, the
Department of Communications provided the first clarification of the intention
of the broadband survey and what the analysis would provide. The Secretary, Mr
Clarke, told the committee that while the data would include information about
what speeds were being achieved at particular locations within an area, it
would not be able to represent the approximately 10 million premises and draw a
ranking of what they could do:
...this is not a house-by-house engineering analysis. This will
not answer the specific question on a specific address. The intent of it is to
indicate areas—not individual households but areas that are not served or are
underserved...in order to inform prioritisation of completion of the rollout of
the NBN...[26]
5.31
At a hearing the following March, the department clarified that the
information on the MyBroadband website in relation to speed was the estimated
median peak speed for all premises in a given area: 'It is not the individual
premises speed'. When someone put in their address the results were for the
local area only; individual circumstances may vary to a significant degree.[27]
The department further explained that a geographic area was the construct or
boundary of the Telstra distribution area. For the purpose of its analysis, the
department was able to distinguish which ADSL services within an area emanated
from the cabinet (muiltiplexer) and which emanated from the exchange:
For every premise in a [distribution area] that had access to
ADSL, we made a calculation of what we thought their peak speed was and
then—say there are 200 premises in the DA—we found the median, the midpoint of
all the results in that exchange and that is what we are reflecting.[28]
5.32
The survey data from the #MyBroadbandvReality submission presented in figure
6 is a good illustration of how the MyBroadband website estimates represent
almost the maximum rather than average speed, which is what the website (and
the department) implies. Submission author, Mr Grosvenor, told the committee:
...the [MyBroadband] website talks about the 'median speed'
that people should receive, which means it should be the middle speed. But we
did not find it anywhere near the median.[29]
Evidence from the New South Wales
Central Coast
5.33
Evidence received from witnesses on the New South Wales Central Coast at
the committee's hearing in Terrigal on 11 March 2014 provided an interesting
snapshot of the wider picture presented by the #MyBroadbandvReality survey and
submission. The Central Coast was one of the first rollout sites for the NBN and
by the end of 2013 there was an expectation the region was on track for a
three-year delivery of FTTP across the coast.
5.34
The committee heard evidence in relation to two surf clubs which were
showing high download speeds on the MyBroadband website when the clubs in
question in fact had no broadband infrastructure. Mr Abrahams, spokesperson for
the Central Coast Broadband Alliance, drew the committee's attention to:
...the somewhat clumsy attempt on the MyBroadband website to
represent our region as one that has ample broadband infrastructure via ADSL,
wireless or otherwise. In our opinion...it should be taken down throughout the
region. It is not accurate. I bring two tests: both McMasters surf club and
Killcare surf club reportedly have 17 megabits per second potential speed for
their download capacity over ADSL2. I can report from committees of both these
clubs that there is no broadband infrastructure in those two surf clubs, zero,
nothing. We once had ADSL1 but, because of the congestion, we have nothing.[30]
5.35
Mr Abrahams speculated that the data used by the department came from:
'...Telstra's theoretical ADSL map, which we all know is on a parallel universe
because it has never existed or actually gelled with reality in this particular
part of the world'.[31]
5.36
A similar scenario was presented to the committee by Mr Patrick
Spedding, managing director of research and development for Rocket Software in
Sydney. Speaking in his private capacity, Mr Spedding told the committee of his
experience getting his new house connected to ADSL through AAPT at eight
megabits per second in 2009, which he described as 'bearable'. However:
Now we are at two megabits per second, max. The myfraudband
website—sorry, myBroadband!—states that we can get 21.56 megabits per second,
median speed. Now, I am a mathematician, so I understand the difference between
a max and a median. And basically that is not possible.[32]
5.37
The committee heard from a number of other Central Coast witnesses who
described how their personal experience did not match the information provided
on the department's website in relation to internet speeds. The main concern
was that the information being made available by the department through its
website was overestimating average download speeds, sometimes by a significant margin.
Inaccurate information was therefore being provided to NBN Co to determine the
type of service that would be offered. People's confidence in the authenticity
of the MyBroadband website data was being eroded because it was not
authoritative at any given point in time.
5.38
Senator O'Neill expressed people's frustrations in the following way:
That is civic information. It is citizens seeking information
about the society in which they live. I think they have a reasonable
expectation, despite the complexity of this information management, that they
are going to get something that is approximating the truth in terms of their
experience.[33]
5.39
Responding to the concerns raised at the hearing in Terrigal, the department
at one point rejected the argument that the information on the website was
inaccurate, but later qualified this response by rejecting claims that the
website itself was 'totally inaccurate'. The Secretary, Mr Clarke, acknowledged
that producing a modelled outcome that was a median for hundreds of premises was
'inherently frustrating' for people who could not match the speeds received at
their home address with the information available on the department's website.
Estimated median peak broadband and
upload speeds
5.40
The department confirmed that the website's use of the phrase 'limited
availability' in certain circumstances to describe the number of available
ports in a multiplexer was misleading because there were occasions where the
information provided should have read 'no availability'. In response to the department
acknowledging that approximately 1.1 million premises across the country were
in areas where there was 'limited port availability', the committee's chair,
Senator Lundy, asked:
Wouldn't it be more honest and open to describe the
situation, rather than being 'limited availability', that there is 'finite
availability' in those areas? And wouldn't it be more honest and open to
describe the myBroadband website as 'Your community's estimated average median
broadband' website—for the sake of openness and honesty, because at the moment
people look up myBroadband and they do not get their broadband; they get the
community's estimated median peak broadband and then some obfuscation...The term
'limited availability' is a misleading euphemism for a finite capacity in their
geographic area.[34]
5.41
Further questioning of the department during Additional Estimates
hearings in February 2014 and at the committee's public hearing in Sydney on 12
March 2014 addressed the issue of upload speeds:
Senator CONROY: Did you do a median upload speed?
Ms Grainger: No, we did not.
Senator CONROY: Why not?
Ms Grainger: Senator, we did not have data available
to us in that respect.
Senator CONROY: What? Nobody knows what their upload
speeds are?
Ms Grainger: No, we did not have the data available to
us in that respect. We do set out in the report the download speeds and upload
speeds in relation to each technology platform, but we specifically focused on
download speeds with ADSL...
Senator CONROY: We are talking about broadband quality
and you identify five-meg upload as defining broadband quality and you have
made no effort to test even the 20,000 Telstra lines for their upload.
Ms Grainger: We had download speed real empirical data
available to us but we did not have the upload speed data available to us.[35]
5.42
At a later hearing, the department reiterated that it did not have data
available in relation to upload speeds, but that it was the department's
intention to include a speed test facility on the website:
Chair [Senator LUNDY]: Can you get that data?
Ms Grainger: In relation to the crowd source data,
when we put the speed test on the site we are going to be capturing that. That
is something we are very much looking forward to getting. That will give us a
real test of user experience.
Chair: This is critical because obviously upload
speeds create genuine interactivity and make the internet work for people, as
opposed to them being in large part a bunch of passive consumers. Will the new
capability that you are building in to allow that input by the crowd have a
specific category for upload speeds as well as download speeds?
Ms Grainger: Yes, that is our intent.[36]
5.43
When asked why data on upload speeds was not available at the time the
MyBroadband website was launched, the department later confirmed that it had:
...requested a range of detailed data from carriers, including
measurements of copper line signal loss, and/or line sync speeds attributable
to specific cable lengths in each Distribution Area where ADSL services were
available.
The Department is capturing measurements of upload speed by
implementing a data speed test facility on the MyBroadband website.[37]
5.44
Mr Clarke informed the committee that several enhancements had been
implemented, with more to follow, that would enable crowd-sourced data to be
openly overlayed on the department's database:
One was to take new developments in actual build
infrastructure into the model. The second was to publish the underlying data.
The third will be adding our own speed tests...onto the site.[38]
'It's raining outside; my network's
not working'
5.45
One issue that has been raised with the committee and with parliamentary
committees established in previous parliaments to examine broadband-related
issues, is the effect of inclement weather on the reliability of Telstra's
copper network. As previously noted, the #MyBroadbandvReality submission
included at the top of its list of nine recommendations consideration of the
impact of weather and region specific environmental factors on broadband
availability and reliability:
Rain in particular was a recurring theme in many comments.
For people with ADSL, 'rain' was mentioned 63 times. Extreme heat also caused
people's connections to either drop out or cease totally, requiring a call to
Telstra. Considering the amount of extreme weather this country experiences (in
particular drought and flooding), this should be paramount to any
decision-making in regard to what infrastructure would work best for which
location, as well as ensuring what is currently in use has not already been
irreparably damaged.[39]
5.46
This end-user evidence—from everyday Australians using the internet from
home or trying to run small business—is important because it corroborates
previous evidence received by the committee about the effect of rain on Telstra's
pits and the weather protection (or lack thereof) of the physical network. Yet
the department's evidence to the committee confirmed that while some of the factors
that affect broadband availability and quality were included in their report
and on the MyBroadband website, inclement weather was not one of them.
Assistant Secretary, Ms Grainger, told the committee at its 12 March public
hearing:
Availability for ADSL technology can be impacted by a range
of factors: pair gains, distance from the exchange and the type of technology
that is actually available. We catalogue all of those in our report and we also
set those out.[40]
5.47
The report's introduction made it clear that the spatial analysis of the
coverage of broadband customer access did not include local or temporary
variations in broadband infrastructure, services available or service quality,
network dimensioning or other operational factors that were the responsibility
of individual network owners. It added:
Other factors that impact on an end user's experience and
perception of quality such as reliability, retail pricing, competition,
value-added components to the service, weather events and mobility were also
excluded from the analysis.[41]
5.48
When asked if the well-known reality of the effects of inclement weather
on the copper network was factored into the MyBroadband website data, Ms
Grainger confirmed:
We recognise that weather and weather events can have an
impact on infrastructure, particularly broadband. But, realistically, we did
not have any data available until we set out. While we recognise that weather
events have an impact on both availability and quality, we had no data
available to us to include that in our modelling.[42]
5.49
Mr Grosvenor was critical of the department's approach to providing
practical advice to consumers about the effects of weather in its report and on
its website. He argued that no real effort was made to make people aware that
the network was unreliable in certain weather conditions such as rain and
extreme heat. He noted that while mention of weather was hidden away on the
MyBroadband website in a 'Frequently Asked Question' on the methodology '...[my]
feeling is that the typical person is not going to follow that and read that
far'.
5.50
Mr Grosvenor put to the committee that the department should have been
more up-front with people, and that its website:
...should state very clearly, first off, what type of internet
connection [people] will get—whether it is ADSL, satellite or fibre to the
premises. And then, for example, if it states that it is ADSL and gives a speed
estimate, almost straight away it should say in a big note, 'Weather can have a
big impact on the speed or the quality'.[43]
Committee view
5.51
The committee notes that, in opposition, the Coalition made unqualified
claims about prioritising underserved areas. In April 2013 the Coalition
promised that 'suburbs, regions, towns and business districts with the poorest
services and greatest need for upgrades will receive first priority'.[44]
This promise was repeated by the minister in November 2013, when he said: 'two
million households and businesses across Australia cannot get basic fixed-line
broadband at present. Addressing these underserviced areas first is a key
objective of our NBN policy'.[45]
5.52
Since December 2013, this pledge has been incrementally watered down.
Now areas of greatest need will only receive the rollout 'first' where it is 'logistically
and commercially viable to do so'. In practice, this means that few underserved
areas will be prioritised in line with the minister's April 2013 and November
2013 pledges because—as you would expect—the many underserved areas in
Australia are underserved precisely because it is not 'commercially viable' for
the private sector to serve them.
5.53
The committee considers that in many cases the MyBroadband data is
unreliable and is not meeting community expectations. In many cases, the 'estimated
average mean' speeds do not reflect the real speeds achieved by individuals.
This was set out at length in the #MyBroadbandvReality submission and testimony
provided to the committee.
5.54
The Broadband Availability and Quality Report also makes some
interesting conclusions about broadband quality which reflect the political
genesis of the review. For example, the report includes no detail of upload
speeds in its assessment of broadband quality, and both HFC and FTTP are accorded
the same 'quality' rank of 'A', despite the gulf in upload performance.
Further, the report does not factor environmental conditions into its analysis,
despite the susceptibility of copper-based broadband to weather conditions.
5.55
The committee welcomes the timeliness of the #MyBroadbandvReality submission
and the Australia-wide survey which underpinned it. The committee acknowledges
that the survey was not scientific and that it relied on voluntary online contributions,
but considers that the survey represents a community-sourced, real-world investigation
of broadband availability and quality.
Navigation: Previous Page | Contents | Next Page