Chapter 2 Performance Reporting and Regulatory Issues
Background
2.1
The Shareholder Ministers’ Fourth Performance Report (the performance
report) includes information about the progress of the National Broadband
Network (NBN) rollout covering the six month period from 1 July to 31
December 2012, in addition to developments or post-closing events covering the
period from 1 January to 22 March 2013. More recent developments relating to
regulatory issues are also included.
2.2
The Performance Report includes:
n A summary of the key
milestones met by NBN Co Limited (NBN Co) in the reporting period
n Six monthly and
annual financial statements for the period ended 30 June 2012, and
n ‘Measurement against’
Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) for the NBN Co for the six month period
ended 31 December 2012.[1]
NBN Rollout Progress Over the Reporting Period
2.3
The key statistical results for the NBN rollout in the reporting period
are listed in Table 2.1. Results have not been included with Corporate Plan
targets as targets are provided for the end of financial year only and not for six
monthly results.
Table 2.1 Key
Cumulative Current Half Year Results for the National Broadband Network Rollout
ended on 30 June and 31 December 2012
Cumulative Metrics |
Cumulative Current Half
year as at 31 December 2012 |
Cumulative Current Half
year as at 30 June 2012 |
|
Construction commenced or completed[2] |
Brownfields |
784 592 |
280 142 |
New Development Lots |
60 686 |
13 885 |
Fixed Wireless |
21 684 |
7062 |
Premises passed/covered |
Brownfields |
46 078 |
28 860 |
New Development Lots |
26 251 |
10 054 |
Fixed Wireless & First Release Interim Satellite |
267 318 |
173 885 |
Premises Activated |
Brownfields |
6613 |
3364 |
New Development Premises |
3848 |
503 |
Fixed Wireless & First Release Interim Satellite |
24 062 |
9669 |
Source Shareholder
Ministers’ Fourth Performance Report, Submission 3, p. 5.
2.4
For Premises Passed/Covered, analysis of the cumulative KPI metrics shows
that for the half year ended on 31 December 2012 the NBN Co achieved:
n Brownfields – 17 218 premises
passed/covered.
n New development lots
or Greenfields – 16 197 lots passed/covered.
n Fixed wireless and
satellite – 93 433 premises passed/ covered.
2.5
For Premises Activated, analysis of the cumulative KPI metrics shows
that for the half year ended on 31 December 2012 the NBN Co achieved:
n Brownfields – 3249
premises activated.
n New development lots
or Greenfields – 3345 premises activated.
n Fixed wireless and
first release interim satellite – 14 393 premises activated.
Current Progress
2.6
On 29 January 2013, the NBN Co released key metrics showing the progress
of the NBN rollout for the periods covering the six months ended in June and
December for the years from 2011 to 2013. A part of this release, the key NBN rollout
metrics included actual and target figures (rounded to the nearest 00’).[3]
2.7
These figures revised down the fixed wireless and satellite target for
premises activated from 38 000[4] to 37 700. This had the
effect of lowering the total premises activated target by 300 premises. Table
2.2 shows the key NBN rollout metrics (rounded to the nearest 00) for the six
month periods for June to December from 2011 to 2013.[5]
The figures (actual) provided in the Shareholder Ministers’ Report for the
cumulative current half year as at 31 December 2012 are underlined.
Table 2.2 Key
NBN Rollout Metrics for the six month periods ended in June and December
2011-2013 (Construction commenced or completed, Premises/Lots Passed and
Premises Activated)
|
Actual |
Actual |
Actual |
Target |
|
June
2011 |
June
2012 |
Dec
2012 |
June
2013 |
Construction
commenced or completed |
|
29 600 |
305 000 |
784 600 |
1 220 000 |
Brownfields |
|
|
784 592 |
|
Greenfields |
- |
- |
60 686 |
|
Fixed
Wireless |
- |
- |
21 684 |
|
Premises/lots
passed |
|
|
|
|
Brownfields |
18 000 |
29 000 |
46 100
46 078 |
286 000 |
Greenfields |
- |
10 000 |
26 300
26 251 |
55 000 |
Fixed
wireless |
|
9 000 |
17 300 |
320 000 |
Satellite* |
165 000 |
165 000 |
250 000 |
Total (Fixed Wireless and Satellite) |
|
|
267 318 |
|
Total
(premises/lots passed) |
183 000 |
213 000 |
339 700
339 647 |
661 000 |
Premises
Activated |
|
|
|
|
Brownfields |
600 |
3400 |
6600
6613 |
44 000 |
Greenfields |
- |
500 |
3800
3848 |
10 000 |
Fixed
Wireless |
- |
100 |
1000 |
37 700 |
Satellite |
200 |
9600 |
23 100 |
Total (Fixed Wireless and Satellite) |
|
|
24 062 |
|
Total
(premises activated) |
800 |
13 600 |
34 500
34 523 |
91 700 |
Source NBN
Co, 2013, 34 500 Australian Homes and Businesses Now Using the NBN, p. 2 and
Shareholder Ministers Fourth Performance Report, p. 5.
2.8
On the release of the above figures, the NBN Co stated:
The results reflect progress in the early stages of the
rollout and are what we would expect given the time and work necessary to put
in place the contracts and agreements needed to get to this point of execution.
As can be seen by our targets, this rollout is not a linear progression, but a
rapid ramp-up. We are targeting to pass more premises in the final quarter of
the financial year than we will have passed in the entire project up to the
beginning of that quarter. Additional construction resources will be added over
the coming months to help achieve these targets.[6]
2.9
On 21 March 2013, the NBN Co revised down its rollout forecast for fibre
to reflect a three month delay.[7] The NBN Co stated:
The June 2013 Corporate Plan target of passing 341 000
premises with fibre is now expected to be achieved about three months later.
Between 190 000 and 220 000 premises are now forecast to be passed by fibre by
end June.[8]
2.10
The NBN Co attributed the rollout delay to a slower rate of rollout progress
on the ground than forecast. The NBN Co stated that the ‘delay will be
recovered.’[9]
2.11
Immediate action undertaken by the NBN Co to remedy the current three
month delay is outlined in detail in Chapter 4.
2.12
Although the NBN is currently delayed, the NBN Co expects that the NBN
will still be completed by 2021 with the overall cost of the NBN to remain
unchanged.[10]
Updated Three-Year NBN Rollout Plan
2.13
On 5 May 2013, the Government together with the NBN Co released an
updated three-year NBN rollout plan which provides a timeline for another 1.35
million premises (or 190 new towns and groups of suburbs, homes and businesses)
to be added to the NBN.[11]
2.14
The NBN Co stated that for areas that have had the NBN fibre network for
over twelve months, about one third of families have elected to be connected to
the NBN and of these about a third have subscribed to the fastest available speeds.[12]
2.15
The NBN Co also stated the pricing of NBN packages is competitive and
highlighted a recent study undertaken in the first release site of Brunswick,
Melbourne which found:
…nearly half of existing NBN users polled said household
internet costs were roughly the same since switching to the NBN, and 14% were
paying less by using an internet phone service instead of a separate land line.
Generally, those paying more were willing to do so to get higher speeds or
larger download allowances.[13]
Key Performance Indicators
Background
2.16
The KPIs included in the Shareholder Ministers’ Performance Report show
figures for similar categories to those presented in the previous Performance
Report. Data is again presented as cumulative year on year.
2.17
This includes three main categories for:
n Construction
commenced or completed
n Premises
passed/covered
n Premises activated.
2.18
These three main categories are further divided into:
n Brownfields
n New Development Lots
n Fixed Wireless (for
construction commenced or completed) or a combined Fixed Wireless and First
Release Interim Satellite (for the two main categories of premises
passed/covered and premises activated).
2.19
To date the committee has also received information relevant to the NBN
rollout for the six month period ended on 30 June 2011 to the six month period
ended 31 December 2012. This has provided the committee with four performance
reports and two years of NBN rollout information.
2.20
The KPI categories contained in these four performance reports have been
consolidated and presented in Table 2.3.
2.21
Table 2.3 shows the changes in the way information about the NBN rollout
has been presented to the committee. In the Shareholder Ministers’ First Report
information was presented in the two categories of premises passed and premises
activated. The Shareholder Ministers’ Second Report added another main category
of work under way (WuW) and included ‘covered’ together with the main category
of premises passed. Subcategories of: Brownfields, New Developments, First
Release Interim Satellite and Fixed Wireless were also added.
2.22
The Shareholder Ministers’ Third Report removed the category of WuW and
replaced it with Construction Commenced. The subcategory of New Developments
was changed to New Development Lots and the subcategories of First Release
Interim Satellite and Fixed Wireless were added together to create the
subcategory of Fixed Wireless and Satellite.
2.23
The Shareholder Ministers’ Fourth Report changed the main category of
construction commenced to construction commenced or completed. The subcategory
of fixed wireless and satellite was changed to fixed wireless and First Release
Interim Satellite.
Table 2.3 NBN Rollout KPIs used to
indicate NBN Rollout Progress in Shareholder Ministers’ Performance Reports 1
to 4
KPI Main Categories |
RN1 (June 2011) |
RN2 (December 2011) |
RN3 (June 2012) |
RN4 (December 2012) |
|
Work Under Way |
Construction Commenced |
Construction commenced or completed |
Premises Passed |
Premises passed/covered |
Premises passed/covered |
Premises passed/covered |
Premises Activated |
Premises Activated |
Premises Activated |
Premises Activated |
FTTP Greenfields |
|
|
|
KPI Sub Categories |
RN1(June 2011) |
RN2(December 2011) |
RN3 (June 2012) |
RN4(December 2012) |
(FTTP Greenfields category only) |
Brownfields |
Brownfields |
Brownfields |
Developer applications |
New Developments |
New Development Lots |
New Development Lots |
Active applications |
First Release Interim Satellite |
Fixed Wireless and Satellite |
Fixed Wireless and First Release Interim Satellite |
Contracts signed |
Fixed Wireless |
|
|
Source Shareholder
Ministers’ Performance Reports 1 to 4.
2.24
During the time the committee had been receiving Shareholder Ministers’
Performance Reports the NBN Co publicly released a revised corporate plan which
took into account the timeframe from 2012 to 2015. The 2012-2015 Corporate Plan
publicly released on 6 August 2012 replaced the 2011-2013 Corporate Plan
publicly released on 17 December 2010.
2.25
The NBN Co recently stated that it was in the process of revising its
2012-2015 Corporate Plan and would submit a new version to the Government in May
2013.[14]
Targets
2.26
The NBN rollout targets were originally included in the NBN Co 2011-2013
Corporate Plan and included separate tables for premises passed or covered
(incremental year-on-year) and premises active service (incremental
year-on-year). The majority of category titles for which targets were provided
between corporate plans changed or categories were combined.
2.27
The NBN rollout targets were published with the public release of the
2011-2013 Corporate Plan on 17 December 2010. These targets were revised down
with the public release of the 6 August 2012 Corporate Plan. The committee’s
Fourth Report outlines these changes in detail.
2.28
From the first corporate plan to the second, for total premises with
active service, the figure for the financial year ended in 2011 is revised down
by 34 200 premises; for 2012 the target figure is revised down by 102 500
premises; and for 2013 the figure is revised down by 327 000 premises.[15]
2.29
On 29 January 2012, with the release of the NBN rollout figures for the
six months ended on 31 December 2012, the targets quoted for premises activated
for combined fixed wireless and satellite network rollouts was revised down by
300 premises from the 2012-2015 Corporate plan, bringing the total NBN rollout
target figure for June 2013, down by 300 premises to 91 700.[16]
2.30
Following this, on 21 March 2013, the NBN Co issued a statement that it
would revise down its forecast for the rollout of fibre optic cable to reflect ‘a
delay of about three months.’[17] The revised NBN rollout
figures will be published in the new NBN Co Corporate Plan.
2.31
The NBN Co stated the current three month delay in the NBN rollout would
not impact on the expected completion date or the cost of the NBN. The NBN Co
stated:
At this stage there is no reason to say that the end date
would shift, because, if you look at it overall, with 11½ million or 12 million
homes that we will connect, the 100,000 homes that slipped early in the program
can typically be recovered.[18]
2.32
In regard to the types of KPIs used and information provided to the
committee, the performance report states:
This is the fourth report and as such reflects initial
reporting while systems and reporting processes are still in development. The
data will become more meaningful against actual and forecast measures as the
reporting series builds up over time. This report is consistent with a start-up
company in the early years of the rollout. Further KPIs will be brought online
as agreed with the Shareholders.[19]
NBN Co Limited Unaudited Financial Result
2.33
The Shareholder Ministers’ Performance Report includes unaudited
consolidated financial statements for the NBN Group for the six months ended 31
December 2012.[20]
2.34
Operational expenditure over the six month period ended on
31 December 2012 was approximately $333 million which represents an
increase of approximately $46 million from the previous six month period.[21]
The forecast operating expenditure target in the 2012-2015 NBN Co Corporate
Plan for the financial year ended June 2013 is $1 093 million.[22]
The current result of $333 million represents approximately 30 per cent of the
target total.
2.35
Expenses were mainly attributed to:
n $153 million for
employee related expenses
n $57 million for
Information Technology and facilities expenses
n $29 million for
external service costs.[23]
2.36
Over the same period, capital expenditure increased from the previous
six month period from approximately $517 million to approximately $792 million.[24]
The forecast capital expenditure target in the 2012-2015 NBN Co Corporate Plan for
the financial year ended June 2013 is $3 191 million.[25]
The current result of $792 million represents approximately 25 per cent of the
target total.
2.37
Total revenue over the six month period was $29 314 000. Revenue was
derived from:
n Telecommunications
revenue - $5 262 000[26] (which rose from $1 924
000 since June 2012)[27]
n Other revenue - $70
000[28] (which rose from $19 000
since June 2012)[29]
n Interest income - $23
983[30] 000 (which fell from 60
164 000 since June 2012).[31]
2.38
Over the six month period the NBN Co experienced an operating loss of
approximately $408 million (the exact amount is $408 268 000).[32]
This is almost double the loss experienced in the same period in 2011 of
$220 567 000.[33]
2.39
Since its start-up, similarly to previous statements made, the NBN Co
‘expects to record a tax loss in the current year’ which is ‘expected to
continue for the next several financial years.’ A nil income tax expense has
been recorded with no deferred tax asset having been recognised for these tax
losses at this point in time.[34]
Regulatory Issues
NBN Co’s Special Access Undertaking
2.40
On 18 December 2012, the NBN Co lodged a new Special Access Undertaking
(SAU) with the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC). The new
SAU replaced the SAU lodged with the ACCC in December 2011 (and subsequently
withdrawn on 7 September 2012).[35]
2.41
The new SAU includes amended non-price terms which NBN Co stated arose
from the now concluded ‘Contract Development Process’. The SAU also contains
other amendments which ‘clarify the operation of the SAU.’[36]
2.42
On 4 April 2013, the ACCC released a draft decision on the new SAU. The
ACCC stated ‘notwithstanding the proposed variations, the draft decision notes
that many features of the SAU have merit’ however its preliminary view is that changes
to the SAU are required as ‘it is not satisfied that the SAU meets the relevant
criteria for acceptance.’[37]
2.43
The ACCC has proposed to issue a formal notice to vary the NBN Co SAU.
The proposed changes:
…are directed towards ensuring that, for matters not directly
dealt with in the SAU, the access regime would continue to operate in the
ordinary way. They would also preserve the primacy of commercially negotiated
access agreements in the regime.[38]
2.44
The ACCC has proposed the following key amendments:
n
‘Specific
drafting amendments to provide certainty about how NBN Co will comply with its
obligations under the telecommunications access regime; specifically any ACCC
regulatory rulings;
n
Allowing
for periodic price re-balancing through review by the ACCC – the outcomes of
these reviews would be constrained on the basis that any changes to price
structures or relative prices must be revenue neutral in their effect;
n
Amendments
to clarify that the ACCC could have a role in overseeing the withdrawal of
products and the introduction of new products and their prices, should the need
arise, mainly to support an effective price cap regime;
n
Amendments
which allow a greater degree of flexibility in the approach that will be
adopted at various points in time throughout the SAU, to mirror usual
regulatory practice and so encourage efficient investment in and operation of
the network; and
n
The
removal of a number of proposed non-price terms from the SAU, including those
relating to service levels, in order to facilitate effective commercial
negotiation.’[39]
2.45
The ACCC’s proposed changes ‘should deliver a framework for the
regulation of NBN Co’s services
which:
n
‘Ensures
consumers and businesses get services of broadly the quality they get today for
broadly the price they get today. Consumers and businesses would only pay more
for services and/or usage beyond what they get today;
n
Allows
for vigorous retail competition;
n
Provides
NBN Co with the opportunity, subject to efficient investment and adequate
demand for its services, to earn a reasonable return on its investment (but no
more);
n
Provides
NBN Co with incentives to not be wasteful, but to also innovate and invest to
offer improved services/capacity over time in response to customer demand;
n
Ensures
that NBN Co and access seekers have incentives to commercially negotiate and
agree non-price terms and conditions of access to NBN Co’s services; and
n
Provides
a suitable balance, between certainty on key principles and flexibility over
detailed terms of access, over the SAU’s proposed 27 year term.’[40]
2.46
The ACCC has stated that the next step in the SAU assessment process is
to issue the NBN Co with a formal notice to vary the SAU. Without any further
variance to the current consideration process, the ACCC is required to make a
final decision on the SAU by 19 July 2013.[41]
2.47
The ACCC stated the timeframe for consideration of the new SAU ‘is
consistent with timeframes for the ACCC’s assessment of other undertakings and
other regulatory processes.’[42]
Wholesale Broadband Agreement
2.48
Between 28 September and 30 November 2012, the NBN Co was undertaking
discussions with customers in reference to the Wholesale Broadband Agreement
(WBA). A final draft of the Contract Development Process relating to the WBA was
released on 30 November 2012.[43]
2.49
While the subsequent draft of the WBA has been placed on hold pending
ACCC assessment of the SAU, the NBN Co will align the contents of its WBA with
the finalised and accepted SAU.[44]
2.50
The NBN Co has stated that it ‘has proposed that the current WBA be
extended pending the acceptance of the SAU.’[45]
2.51
The ACCC stated that it:
…has previously indicated that it expects parties to agree to
short term arrangements for the continuing supply of NBN Co’s services until
assessment of the SAU concludes and the regulatory framework is established.[46]
Additional NBN Rollout Issues
Connecting Multi-Dwelling Units
2.52
The NBN Co stated that residential multi-dwelling units (MDUs)
make up over 30 per cent of the ‘addressable market.’ As a result, a project to
‘develop processes and capabilities to make those premises NBN ready’ has been
established.[47]
2.53
Each MDU will be cabled from the ‘multiport to the Premises
Connection Device for each end user in parallel with construction of the FSAM.’
The NBN Co is engaging contractors to manage the end-to-end cabling of MDUs
under four MDU Cabling Partner (MCP) work packages:
n
‘MCP 1 - On 21 December 2012, a contract was awarded to Downer
EDI to complete MDU buildings in New South Wales (NSW), the Australian Capital
Territory and Victoria.
n
MCP 2 - On 21 December 2012, a contract was awarded to Universal
Communications Group Limited to complete MDU buildings in Tasmania and NSW.
n
MCP 3 and 4 - At 31 December 2012 bilateral negotiations were
underway with awarding contracts to complete further MDU buildings.’[48]
2.54
In regard to the Downer EDI contract, the NBN Co announced:
…the signing of
contracts with Downer EDI Limited and Universal Communications Group Limited
for design and construction services covering a range of MDUs. These contracts
will enable NBN Co to accelerate the rollout of the [Fibre-to-the-Premise] FTTP
to around 17,600 blocks of flats and units across four states and territories
over the next two years. The approximate value of the contracts is up to $87
million.[49]
2.55
The NBN Co 2012-2015 Corporate Plan incorporates the lessons learned in
regard to its experience in connecting MDUs to the NBN. This includes the move
from the ‘demand drop’ approach, to a more efficient ‘build drop’ approach for
installation and ‘a higher degree of engagement with body corporate entities’
including ahead of installation site surveys.[50]
2.56
The NBN Co’s definition of MDUs includes:
Premises that contain
more than one dwelling unit, which can range from duplexes to 200+ unit
apartment blocks. Each dwelling unit is assumed as equivalent to one [Geo Coded
National Address File] GNAF (e.g. a 50 unit apartment block will have 50
GNAFs).[51]
2.57
The NBN Co offered a further explanation and stated Australian MDUs tend
not to have a basement, but are basically individual homes E.g. townhouses,
attached in blocks of nine or less units. The NBN Co stated:
…it is important to
clarify the MDU situation, because people think of MDUs as high-rise tower
blocks with hundreds of units in them like we see in Singapore, Hong Kong,
Japan et cetera. But in Australia on average an MDU has nine units. The vast
majority of these have three, four or five. In Europe we call them townhouses.
They are horizontal MDUs. They are basically individual homes which are also
classified as an MDU but you would obviously connect them individually. They do
not lend themselves to technology in the basement. There are no basements in
the first place.[52]
2.58
The NBN Co has previously stated that it will need to have a high degree
of engagement[53]
with body corporate entities and undertake site surveys ahead of time[54],
which incurs additional costs.[55]
This detailed design and installation for the internal cabling of MDUs would
also incur increased costs.[56]
2.59
The differentiation between single dwelling units (SDUs) and MDUs from
the previous corporate plan to the current corporate plan therefore incorporates
‘a provision for increased MDU costs relating to the design and cabling of all
End-User units inside MDUs.’[57] This increased build and engagement cost of connecting MDUs to the NBN
contributes to the overall customer connect costs which in turn serves to
increase NBN Co’s total capital expenditure.[58]
2.60
The NBN Co explained that costing MDU connections to the NBN is ‘a very
strict process’ undertaken by NBN Co’s finance department and takes account of
the differing MDU building types. In regard to making savings on MDU
connections, the NBN Co also stated that it had investigated using the existing
copper network and having a Digital Subscriber Line Access Muliplexer (DSLAM)[59]
in MDUs with basements, however this option raised issues ensuring an analogue
voice service. The NBN Co stated:
…the costings …are
done by our finance department. In fact, we have a very strict process whereby
the architects do the architecture and the technical stuff. The only part of
the company for which we rely on financial numbers is our finance department.
What I can say to you is that obviously we looked at the various costs of doing
things in different ways. …a significant number of MDUs are really horizontal
SDUs and so you have to treat them in an architecture sense and therefore in a
financial sense as a single dwelling unit. There is a percentage that really do
have basements and really do have main distribution frames and you can treat
them as such. Obviously we looked at the option of running fibre into the
basement, putting a small DSLAM into the basement and then using the existing
copper. That has certain attractions, obviously, as you do not get into
structural separation issues because normally that copper is owned by the
building owner. There is no question there is a saving to be had by not having
to fibre a multi-dwelling unit, but there are some other issues that need to be
dealt with, such as how you ensure that you get analogue voice, which is a
tricky issue. What I am really trying to say is that there is not a simple
answer. It needs some very careful work because applying analogue voice in that
situation is nontrivial.[60]
2.61
The NBN Co added that while it had investigated using the existing
copper network to connect MDUs to the NBN, it was executing the Government’s
FTTP policy. The NBN Co stated:
…there are obviously
ways you can look at doing MDUs using copper. We would be remiss if we did not
have a look at that. It is an obvious thing to do, but it is a policy decision,
and the government has been absolutely clear on what the policy is. It is to
provide fibre to the premise into all MDUs. That is what we are executing on.
That is what is happening.[61]
2.62
The NBN Co added that degradation of the copper network was not a
consideration in using the existing copper network to connect MDUs to the NBN,
but rather the Government’s minimum internet speed policy under the NBN, as
well as ensuring an analogue voice service for customers. The NBN Co explained:
It is not so much
degradation [of the copper network] as the issue, when you are using the copper
in [very high bit-rate digital subscriber line] VDSL, with what you do with
analogue voice. That is one of the issues that you have to think about when you
are looking at that. It is a speed product. This is, once again, a policy
issue. Our job as a GBE [Government Business Enterprise] is to bring to the
government the technical and operational facts and the costs of options. It is
no more and no less than that.[62]
2.63
The NBN Co stated the cost savings for connecting MDUs to the NBN
(through building fibre to the basement) was not as great in Australia as in
other countries such as Korea with a high percentage of high rise blocks,
because Australian MDUs tend to be more like SDUs. The NBN Co stated:
Directionally, there
are more high-rises in places like Korea than there are in Australia, so you
would not expect it to make as big a difference [in cost savings] in Australia
as it does in those other countries. You would not expect it to, for the
reasons we talked about before: because you have more horizontal MDUs, which
are more like SDUs.[63]
2.64
The NBN Co is spending $9.8 billion in connecting SDU and MDU customers
to the NBN, the individual cost of which has fallen from $2400 per premise as
the connection model has changed and the number of installations has increased
over time to $1100 per premise. The NBN Co explained:
…customer connect.
That is the bit that goes from the multiport, the connection in the street,
into the home. It is comprised of two parts: the drop and then the in-premises
activity. We did a number of initial sites—several thousand—on a different
model and the cost of those was $2,400. We got some learnings from that, we
changed the model and now we are proceeding into volume. That is, once again,
several thousand. This is a blend, by the way, of SDUs and MDUs—single dwelling
units and multi-dwelling units. The volume actuals we are
getting are around $1,100, which is in fact right on our corporate plan
estimate of $1,100. Just to remind you what all of that is for, it is for
connecting 6.9 million premises and passing and doing the build drops for the
remainder. In fact, some of it is for drops into premises that ultimately may
not be connected or may not have an active service, but it encompasses all of
that. So we are very comfortable with our $9.8 billion.[64]
2.65
In terms of its progress in connecting MDUs to the NBN the NBN Co was
encountering ‘a lot of support’ and stated:
…for MDUs, we are
going through a very structured process in identifying the strata owners. To
date—and again it is early days—we see a lot of support, and we do not see too
many issues in that respect. But ultimately we are going to engage with every
single household in Australia; hence, I would not say that there will never be
any issues going forward. I am sure that there will be problems to be resolved
as we go along.[65]
Costing NBN Models
2.66
On 7 April 2009, the then Government announced the establishment of the
NBN Co Limited to design and build the super-fast ubiquitous NBN[66]
which, upon the public release of the first corporate plan in December 2010 was
estimated to have a total project expenditure of $35.9 billion.[67]
2.67
The NBN would:
n ‘connect [with 90
per cent coverage] homes, schools and workplaces with FTTP, providing broadband
services ... in urban and regional towns with speeds of 100 megabits per second
- 100 times faster than those currently used by most people – extending to
towns with a population of around 1,000 or more people[68]
n use next generation
wireless and satellite technologies that will be able to deliver 12 megabits
per second or more to’ remote and regional areas
n ‘provide fibre optic
transmission links connecting cities, major regional centres and rural towns
n be Australia’s first
national wholesale-only, open access broadband network
n be built and operated
on a commercial basis by a company established at arm’s length from Government involving
private sector investment
n be expected to be
rolled-out, simultaneously, in metropolitan, regional, and rural areas.’[69]
2.68
More than a year later on 6 May 2010, the NBN implementation study was
released which the Government stated ‘confirms that high-speed broadband for
all Australians is achievable, and can be built on a financially viable basis
with affordable prices for consumers.’[70]
2.69
The Implementation Report prepared jointly by McKinsey and Company and
KPMG made 84 recommendations regarding the NBN in relation to: technology,
financing, ownership, the network policy framework and market structure. [71]
2.70
The scope of the NBN Implementation Study was to ‘advise Government on
how best to implement its stated policy objectives, not to evaluate those
objectives’. The Implementation Study stated that it did not:
n ‘Evaluate the
Government’s policy objectives
n Evaluate the decision
to implement the NBN via the establishment of NBN Co
n Undertake a
cost-benefit analysis of the macro-economic and social benefits that would
result from the implementation of a superfast broadband network.’[72]
2.71
Since the release of the implementation study in May 2010, the NBN
rollout is still in its early start-up phase which is evidenced by the NBN Co’s
financial results and the rate of the NBN rollout ramp up.
Fibre-to-the Premise and Fibre-to-the-Node
2.72
Since the announcement of the NBN, there has been regular public debate
about the advantages and disadvantages of a high speed broadband network
delivered using either a FTTP or a Fibre-to-the-Node (FTTN) platform.
2.73
The FTTP or Fibre-to-the-Home option delivers the broadband fibre
network directly into the premise or home and FTTN is a mix of fibre and copper
network, where the fibre is terminated at a node or cabinet in the street and
then run with a copper cable into the premise or home.
2.74
In its First Review, the committee reported on how fibre optic
technology had been selected to support the NBN over alternative technologies,
because of the superior performance of a fibre network over a copper network,
wireless and Hybrid Fibre Coaxial (HFC).
2.75
The NBN Co website also states that at the time prior to the build of
the NBN, the Government was advised the proposals for a FTTN network did not
‘represent value for money’. The NBN Co website states:
The Government announced its decision to establish NBN Co in
April 2009, after the Government received advice that none of the proposals
submitted from interested parties to build a smaller-scale, Fibre-To-The-Node
network represented value for money.[73]
2.76
The NBN Co stated that the FTTP while having a greater short term cost,
was superior to the FTTN as it has a greater long term benefit. The NBN Co
stated:
Some countries are choosing to do fibre to the node or,
increasingly, not just fibre to the node but fibre to the kerb or fibre to the
cabinet, pushing the fibre even further out. In the end, it is a long-term,
short-term trade-off, you would have to say. There are some pluses to a
fibre-to-the-node rollout. You could do a fibre-to-the-node rollout to a part
of Australia—certainly not 93 per cent. You could not use fibre to the node to
get 93 per cent of premises with a high-speed service. You could go only so far
and then you would start to run into the problems you have with ADSL and ADSL2,
unless you just keep pushing that fibre further and further, which will make
the copper loops shorter and shorter, so there is a cost-benefit trade-off
there. But, remember, as you push the fibre further and deeper and make the
copper loops shorter and deeper with a fibre to the node or fibre to the
cabinet, you need to put in more and more and more cabinets. Each one of those
cabinets needs to be powered and active, and then they will have the same
issues that we have talked about, such as of water ingress. So there comes a
point at which you say this still is not the end architecture. Almost everybody
in the world says that the right end architecture is fibre to the premise.[74]
2.77
The Department of Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy
(DBCDE) explained the FTTP option would deliver a better competition outcome
than the FTTN option as well as deliver better value for money. The DBCDE
stated:
The Government started out with fibre to the node and ran a
tender process for that purpose. For whatever reason the Telstra proposition to
that failed and the independent panel that assessed the bids said there was no
value for money. And probably the most important aspect for me when I came in
and looked at this is that the ACCC said that this investment in fibre to the
node was unlikely to necessarily deliver the kind of benefit that the
Government perceived of it and that a substantial part of it would effectively
be wasted, in terms of a competition outcome. So the Government is there,
again, with an attempt to do fibre to the node that was previously unsuccessful
and it is required to either do nothing or move up to fibre to the premises. It
chose to move up to fibre to the premises...[75]
2.78
On 9 April 2013, The Coalition’s plan for fast broadband and an
affordable NBN was announced.[76] This plan for the NBN
relies on a FTTN to deliver fast broadband to brownfields areas (or areas with
existing copper networks) and ‘where commercially feasible’ with a reliance on
a fibre network for new developments (or Greenfields) and where there is sufficient
demand to justify it, with examples of business districts, industrial and
commercial parks, schools, hospitals and the like.[77]
2.79
The alternative FTTN NBN would:
…extend fibre to cabinets within a few hundred metres of user
premises or into the basements of apartment blocks. Fibre to the Node increases
bandwidth at manageable expense by making use of the existing copper
infrastructure over the last few hundred metres before reaching the customer’s
premises. Within a few years FTTN should support downloads exceeding 100
megabits per second over short lengths of copper. According to NBN Co’s own
bullish projections of user demand, such a ceiling would encompass the download
speeds four fifths of NBN users are forecast to demand a decade from now. This
proves there is still plenty of scope for legacy infrastructure to play a part
in providing bandwidth. Of course fibre should generally run all the way to
premises in new (Greenfields) housing estates, unless this isn’t commercially
feasible. In some places especially high maintenance costs may require copper
to be replaced with fibre. Fibre would also typically extend to anywhere there
is demand sufficient to justify it – business districts, industrial and
commercial parks, schools, hospitals, medical centres and universities are just
some examples.[78]
2.80
The Coalition has stated that under its NBN policy it would conduct:
n ‘A rigorous review
into NBN Co’s current commercial progress and options to meet the Coalition’s
policy objectives.’
n An independent audit
into how the NBN was arrived at
n ‘An independent
review into the long-term structure and regulation of telecommunications.’[79]
2.81
During the committee’s Second Review, the Productivity Commission stated
that if formally required, it was within its technical capacity to undertake
analysis on the cost effectiveness of different forms of delivering high speed
broadband. The Productivity Commission stated:
That would be within our technical capacity, drawing on
proper expertise of course. We do not profess to be telco-specific analysts.
But, drawing on appropriate expertise, we could provide some advice to the
committee if that were formally requested of us and we were prioritised to do
that. We would want to undertake the project thoroughly and properly within our
normal behaviour, rather than do it as an ad hoc research adjunct.
…As a matter of course, the Productivity Commission has very
open and transparent processes and always engages fully with all stakeholders.
People see us as a neutral entity and therefore we do get close
cooperation—because of the role we play. Certainly we would not want to move
beyond that which is our core strength and gives us our credibility on other
significant issues.[80]
2.82
On 22 February 2013, Mr Mike Quigley, Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of
the NBN Co announced that the NBN Co had approached peak industry body, The Communications
Alliance to seek a study into the advantages and disadvantages of alternative
NBN models.[81]
2.83
In early May 2013, it was reported the Communications Alliance ruled out
conducting the proposed study.[82]
2.84
When asked whether the NBN Co could consider a potential change in NBN
policy within the framework of a corporate plan, the NBN Co commented:
… a GBE does not enter into costing or working up corporate
plans other than for the job that the government of the day has given it to
work on. So we do not go off speculating on that and trying to develop
alternatives. But I think that if you ask a question then we are obliged to
answer the question.
…Yes, we have the capability. But, as when we were developing
the architecture, the design and ultimately the corporate plan for the network
we are currently building, there are a large number of issues that need to be
clarified before you can proceed with that.[83]
Concluding Comments
National Broadband Network Rollout Progress Over the Period
2.85
The progress of the NBN rollout for the period ended 31 December 2012,
cannot properly be gauged or compared to progress in the previous six month
period as there is no published half year target for the NBN rollout included
in either the Shareholder Ministers’ Performance Report or the NBN Co Corporate
Plan. This was the same issue encountered during the committee’s Third Review
which examined NBN rollout data for the period ending in the middle of a
financial year.
Current Progress of the National Broadband Network Rollout
2.86
On 29 January 2013, the NBN Co announced that it was ramping-up the NBN
rollout with the aim of passing more premises in the final quarter of the
financial year than had been passed in the entire project up to the beginning
of that quarter.[84]
2.87
Two months later, on 21 March 2013, the NBN Co announced that it would
revise its targets to take into account a three month delay in the NBN rollout.
The delay was attributed to a slower rate of rollout progress on the ground by
contractors than originally forecast.
2.88
The NBN Co states the current three month delay in the NBN rollout is
not expected to delay the overall timeframe for the entire NBN rollout or
affect total cost.
2.89
In early May 2013, the NBN Co released an updated three-year rollout
plan which lists an additional 1.35 million premises that are scheduled to
receive the NBN.
Key Performance Indicators and Corporate Plan Targets
2.90
The committee has previously commented that the NBN rollout data
provided in tabular form in the Shareholder Ministers’ Report does not readily
enable comparison of progress against established corporate plan targets.
Information provided in the Shareholder Ministers’ Report is again presented in
a way which does not enable comparison with corporate plan targets without
checking against those targets separately.
2.91
Information contained in Table 2.3 shows how NBN rollout KPI categories
have changed between performance reports. As previously reported the targets (contained
in the Corporate Plans) have also been revised down between corporate plans and
again with the release of NBN rollout information on 29 January 2013, which saw
a revision of targets for the satellite network. Targets in the NBN Co
Corporate Plan will again be revised to take into account the three month delay
in the NBN rollout.
2.92
The NBN Co has on previous occasions stated that the underlying premise
of factors affecting the NBN rollout have changed and so corporate plan targets
have changed. In addition, the NBN Co qualifies the information it has
presented to the committee in addition to that contained in the Shareholder
Ministers’ Performance Report. In the information it provided to the committee
at its hearing on 19 April 2013, the NBN Co qualified its forward looking
statements stating no assurance is given to any third party ‘that the results,
performance or achievements expressed or implied by such Statements will actually
occur, and no third party should rely upon the Statements or consider them as a
representation of what will happen.’[85]
2.93
Together these issues culminate in the situation where tracking the
progress of the NBN rollout is made more complex and reliance is placed on
qualitative statements made in the public domain about NBN progress, rather
than on published quantitative data.
2.94
Given that the NBN is the largest ever infrastructure project undertaken
in Australia, at this early stage of the NBN rollout, it is timely that there
be greater rigour placed on the public reporting of the financial and physical
aspects of the NBN rollout.
NBN Co Unaudited Financial Result
2.95
The Performance Report covers the period which ends in the middle of the
2012-2013 financial year and shows a consolidated operating loss of
approximately $408 million, almost double that experienced in the same period
in the previous year. Over the same period in the previous year, revenue
marginally declined.
2.96
Capital expenditure for the period was well below the corporate plan
target, with the amount spent of $792 million approximately 25 per cent of the
target total. Operational expenditure was $333 million which represents
approximately 30 per cent of the target total.
Regulatory Issues
2.97
In December 2012, the NBN Co lodged a new SAU with the ACCC which
replaces the NBN Co’s SAU lodged with the ACCC in December 2011.
2.98
While the ACCC is still considering the SAU, in early April 2013, it
issued a draft decision on the SAU providing suggestions to NBN Co for changes
to the SAU. The ACCC has stated that the next step in the process is for it to
issue a formal notice to the NBN Co to vary the SAU. The ACCC is required to
make a final decision on the SAU by 19 July 2013.
2.99
A final draft of the CDP under the WBA was released on 30 November 2012.
The NBN Co will align the contents of its WBA with the finalised and accepted
SAU. As has previously occurred, in the interim, existing WBA signed between
parties are expected to be extended.
Connecting Multi-Dwelling Units
2.100
The NBN Co is spending $9.8 billion to connect SDU and MDU customers to
the NBN, the individual cost of which has fallen from $2400 to $1100 per
premise, as the connection model has changed and the number of installations
has increased over time.
2.101
The NBN Co also stated that it had investigated making use of the
existing copper network to connect MDUs, but that this approach was not taken
as it presented issues in ensuring a high speed connection and analogue voice
services for customers. Finally it was not in line with Government policy in
regard to building a FTTP connection.
2.102
Although still in the early stages of the NBN rollout, the NBN Co has
stated that it has received ‘a lot of support’ in connecting MDUs to the NBN.
Costing NBN Models
2.103
The Government’s NBN Implementation Study was not tasked with evaluating
the merits of alternative fast broadband options, or conducting a cost benefit
analysis of these options.
2.104
With increasing recent debate about an alternative way to deliver high
speed broadband across Australia, the need for a cost benefit analysis of
options available to deliver high speed broadband is timely. The NBN Co is best
placed to undertake this kind of costing within the framework of its Corporate
Plan.
Recommendation 1 |
2.105
|
The committee recommends the Government task the NBN Co
Limited to update its Corporate Plan 2012-2015 to prepare strategies to
minimise risk in any policy changes that may reasonably be expected to occur
in the 2012-2015 period. |