Chapter 3 Regional and Remote Issues
Introduction
3.1
Chapter 3 examines issues associated with the National Broadband Network
(NBN) rollout to regional and remote Australia through the fibre, fixed
wireless and satellite networks—all three technologies will be used to rollout
the NBN to regional and remote Australia.
3.2
NBN Co’s performance information for the NBN rollout across the fibre,
fixed wireless and satellite networks is discussed in Chapter 2. Broader issues
relating to NBN policy and alternative network models are also discussed in
Chapter 2.
3.3
In terms of the regional and remote aspect of the NBN rollout, the
Australian Government’s Statement of Expectations for the NBN Co in
implementing the NBN notes that, in progressing the NBN rollout, ‘the
Government expects that the NBN Co will take into account the Government’s
commitment that fibre will be built in regional areas as a priority’.[1]
The NBN Co ‘will also bring forward the introduction of wireless and satellite
services so that regional Australia can get better broadband access sooner’.[2]
3.4
The Australian Government’s objective for the NBN Co is to:
…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. All remaining premises will be served by a
combination of nextgeneration fixed wireless and satellite technologies
providing peak speeds of at least 12 megabits per second.[3]
3.5
In accordance with the Government’s Statement of Expectations, the
seven per cent of premises that do not fall within the 93 per cent fibre
footprint will therefore be serviced by either a fixed wireless or satellite
connection.[4] As stated in the NBN Co
Corporate Plan 2011-13, the technologies utilised should be:
…Fixed Wireless to 4% of premises (delivering at least 12Mbps) (defined in this Plan as the Fixed Wireless Network or Wireless
Network), and Satellite
to 3% of
premises (defined
in this Plan as
the Satellite Network).[5]
3.6
These technologies are used to reach areas of low population density
that make it ‘both difficult and expensive to build infrastructure to these
premises’.[6] Consequently, this
remaining seven per cent comprises regional and remote Australia.
3.7
In terms of regional and remote communication initiatives concerning the
NBN rollout, the Shareholder Ministers’ Fourth Performance Report to the Joint
Committee on the National Broadband Network (JCNBN) notes that the NBN Co met
with various councils and Regional Development Australia (RDA) bodies over the
reporting period, providing information to ‘increase practical understanding of
the rollout, the NBN and its benefits’.[7] In September 2012, the
NBN Discovery Truck also worked with local retail service providers (RSPs) to
host community events in South Morang, Willunga, Kingston and Townsville, with
more than 570 residents and multiple RSPs attending these events.[8]
3.8
This chapter discusses regional and remote issues emerging over the
Fifth Review reporting period concerning:
n the fibre network
n the fixed wireless
network
n the satellite network
n network extensions
n mobile networks
Fibre Network
Background
3.9
This section of the report looks at issues associated with the fibre
rollout for regional Australia. (Issues relating to the fibre rollout more
generally are discussed in Chapter 2.)
3.10
The NBN fibre footprint covers ‘93 per cent of all Australian premises and
includes communities with more than 1000 premises, and communities with greater
than 500 premises where transit backhaul passes near such communities’.[9]
Seventy per cent of regional Australia will receive fibre.[10]
The NBN Co Corporate Plan 2012-15 identifies that the fibre rollout will be
completed by mid 2021.[11]
Rollout Progress
3.11
In March 2012, the NBN Co released its first ‘Three-year fibre rollout
plan’, which has an objective of construction commenced or completed for
approximately 3.5 million fibre premises by 30 June 2015, across 1 500 communities
in every state and territory in Australia.[12]
3.12
As at 31 December 2012, the NBN Co had commenced or completed
construction in respect of 784 592 fibre brownfield premises and 60 686 fibre
new developments lots.[13] Tables 3.1 and 3.2 set
out details concerning the deployment of fibre to regional (non-metro)
Australia, as provided in the Shareholder Ministers’ Performance Reports to the
committee on the NBN rollout.
3.13
To ‘determine the communities that will receive access to the NBN Co’s Fibre
network over the next 3 years’, the NBN Co is following design principles that
include ‘balancing construction across states and territories and between
metropolitan and regional locations’.[14]
Table 3.1 Fibre deployment—brownfields
Fibre to the premise (FTTP) brownfields
|
|
|
|
|
Premises passed
|
Six months to 31 Dec 2011
|
Six months to 30 June 2012[16]
|
Six months to 31 Dec 2012[17]
|
|
Metro—premises passed
|
3 938
|
2 182 (6 120)
|
1 792 (7 912)
|
|
Non metro—premises passed
|
14 305
|
8 435 (22 740)
|
15 426 (38 166)
|
|
Table 3.2 Fibre deployment—new developments
FTTP new developments
|
|
|
|
|
Premises passed
|
Six months to 31 Dec 2011
|
Six months to 30 June 2012[19]
|
Six months to 31 Dec 2012[20]
|
|
Metro—lots passed
|
798
|
5 517 (6 315)
|
9 292 (15 607)
|
|
Non metro—lots passed
|
153
|
3 586 (3 739)
|
6 905 (10 644)
|
|
3.14
The importance of balancing construction between metropolitan and
regional locations was reinforced over the committee’s Fifth Review reporting period.
As the Australian Communications Consumer Action Network commented:
It is very important that we have the same access to
services in regional and metropolitan areas. That has been a catchcry that has come through time and time again
with regional review after regional review. We will be watching very carefully to make sure that any potential
differences or changes
to the current policy do not end up with a two-tiered system…Our members would be very unhappy if we ended up with a situation where there was a difference in the
way that metropolitan
and regional consumers were being
treated.[21]
3.15
Concerning this matter, the NBN Co emphasised:
You cannot do everywhere at once, so it is just a decision of which areas you go to first. The government has given us clear instructions to try to get balance. As you know, we have put an emphasis on regional Australia early on. Now they have given us instructions to balance across states between regional and urban as well.[22]
3.16
The Shareholder Ministers’ Fourth Performance Report to the committee on
the NBN rollout noted a number of key outcomes through to March 2013 concerning
the fibre rollout to regional Australia, including that, in February 2013, ‘NBN
Co switched on the
NBN in Bacchus Marsh, the first regional
area in Victoria to join
the fibre network.
Nearly 1,800 more homes and businesses
will
have access to the network in the coming months’.[23]
3.17
In October 2012, the NBN Co released updated coverage maps covering a further 148 600 premises in the fibre footprint in New
South Wales, Queensland, South Australia, Victoria and Western Australia.[24] Additional detailed maps indicating where
construction had commenced or been completed, covering approximately 98 800 premises
in the fibre footprint in New
South Wales, Queensland, South Australia, Victoria, Western Australia and the
Australian Capital Territory, were released in January 2013.[25] These maps include regional locations where work
to rollout the fibre network is commencing for the first time.[26]
3.18
On 21 March 2013, the NBN Co reported that it had ‘updated its
short-term fibre rollout timeline expecting to pass 341,000 premises with fibre
about three months later than the June 2013 target, with between 190,000 and
220,000 premises now forecast to be passed by fibre by end June’.[27]
This delay in the fibre rollout may affect regional communities. However, the NBN
Co emphasised that this was a ‘short-term issue’ that would ‘not affect the
long-term delivery of the NBN or the overall cost of the project’.[28]
3.19
The NSW Business Chamber highlighted possible delays in the fibre
rollout to regional communities and the need for the rollout to prioritise
regional communities in pre-existing ‘internet black spots’ as issues of
concern to its members:
The Chamber regularly engages with our members right across
regional NSW who have reported that while they welcome the proposal to provide
over 93% of Australia with… [fibre] NBN connections, the projected delivery of
these services in regions such as the Central West, Northern Rivers,
Murray-Riverina and New England have a commencement date of up to 2015 or
beyond, which means that these areas remain significantly disadvantaged in
terms of telecommunications services…
As has been acknowledged by the NBN Co. itself, the rollout
of the network has been slower than anticipated. The revising down of rollout
numbers has been keenly felt in regional areas with many businesses expressing
their disappointment in the slower connection to the network…
Furthermore, there have been reports of several connection
problems being faced by businesses in a variety of regions…in internet black
spots. It is these areas that should be identified as requiring urgent roll
outs.
The Chamber requests that the NBN Co. continues to deliver
the NBN as soon as possible to the areas most in need.[29]
3.20
The NSW Business Chamber also provided the committee with information on
the fibre rollout progress in Kiama Downs, in regional New South Wales:
The Chamber contacted a local
chamber representative from one of the first active NBN sites, Kiama Downs, NSW
for
feedback regarding
the implementation and connection phases of
the rollout and to determine whether any initial or on-going service faults have been
experienced by NBN customers…
the Chamber understands
that the roll out has been
generally well received. BRW reported a 44% uptake of
NBN
in just over a year in
Kiama Downs and Minnamurra.
This represents the highest penetration in Australia…
The Chamber is also aware that many Kiama businesses initially engaged
with the NBN through an NBN
expo in March
2012. The local engagement and education of businesses on the opportunities and benefits
of
high-speed broadband
through the NBN Discovery truck has assisted many businesses
in understanding the role the NBN can play in their businesses future success and
should continue.[30]
Fixed Wireless and Satellite Networks
3.21
On 6 February 2013, the NBN Co announced a new 25 Mbps speed tier for
its fixed wireless and long term satellite services:
…NBN Co announced plans to bring even faster internet to the
bush by offering a new speed tier doubling the wholesale broadband speeds for
rural and remote Australia. More than half a million homes, farms and businesses
eligible to receive the NBN’s Fixed-Wireless and Long Term Satellite services
will be able to order wholesale download speeds of up to 25 Mbps and upload
speeds of up to 5 Mbps from their internet service provider.[31]
3.22
The committee has previously noted that the NBN Co has aggregated the
data for the fixed wireless and satellite rollout, such that progress for the
fixed wireless service and satellite service cannot be individually determined.[32]
3.23
As discussed in Chapter 2, on 29 January 2013, the NBN Co released six-monthly
figures on progress of the NBN rollout for the period covering June to December
2012.[33] These figures revised
down the fixed wireless and satellite target for premises activated from 38 000
(as set out in the NBN Co Corporate Plan 2012-15[34])
to 37 700.[35] The total premises
activated target in this area has therefore been revised down by 300 premises.
Fixed Wireless Network
Background
3.24
This section of the report examines issues associated with the fixed
wireless rollout for regional and remote Australia. (NBN Co’s performance
information for the fixed wireless rollout is discussed in Chapter 2.)
3.25
On 1 June 2011, the NBN Co announced plans to complete the rollout of
its fixed wireless network by 2015, with the first services to be available
from the middle of 2012.[36] The fixed wireless network
will cover around four per cent of premises outside of areas covered by the fibre
and satellite networks.[37]
3.26
As set out in the committee’s Third Review report, a fixed wireless
service differs from mobile wireless networks ‘as a fixed service is designed
to support a dedicated number of premises, each with a wireless receiver
affixed externally to the property. This enables the delivery of a more
predictable level of service performance to premises compared to a mobile
wireless network which is focussed on mobility’.[38]
3.27
The NBN Co signed
a fixed wireless equipment supply and managed
services contract with Ericsson in June 2011.[39] The first
services over NBN Co’s fixed
wireless network commenced in April
2012.[40]
Rollout Progress
3.28
In August 2011, the NBN Co announced that the communities of Geraldton
(Western Australia), Toowoomba (Queensland), Tamworth (New South Wales),
Ballarat (Victoria) and Darwin (Northern Territory) would be the first to
receive the fixed wireless service.[41]
3.29
The Shareholder Ministers’ Fourth Performance Report to the committee
detailed further progress in this area over the reporting period, noting that:
n Between 3 and 12 July
2012, NBN Co announced the local government areas in the Central West and
Mid-Western regions of New South Wales and the Rockhampton, Townsville and
Mackay regions of Queensland where planning proposals would be lodged to
deliver fixed wireless broadband…
n On 8 and 9 November
2012, NBN Co announced local government areas where planning proposals would be
lodged to deliver fixed wireless broadband including:
n Victoria—the
Goulburn Valley and North East Victoria, Bendigo, Central Victoria and parts of
Northern Victoria; Bass Coast, South, East and Central Gippsland.
n Western
Australia—Great Southern, Wheatbelt region, Goldfields-Esperance area, Peel and
South West Region.
n New South
Wales—Mid North Coast and Manning Region…
n On 17 January 2013,
NBN Co announced that its design and construction partners will work with local
governments to identify appropriate locations for fixed wireless network
infrastructure in and around the Mid Murraylands, South East, Far South East
and Kangaroo Island areas of SA…
n On 26 February 2013,
NBN Co announced that its design and construction partners will work with local
governments to identify appropriate locations for fixed wireless network
infrastructure in and around the Gympie and Sunshine Coast area…
n Also on 6 February
2013, NBN Co began outlining plans to provide some smaller communities and
rural residents in parts of the Northern Rivers with facilities dedicated to delivering
high-speed, fixed-wireless broadband services.[42]
3.30
As at 31 December 2012, there were 1 011 active fixed wireless premises
and the NBN Co had commenced construction of the fixed wireless network for 21 684
premises.[43]
3.31
Ericsson and the NBN Co continued planning and site acquisition
activities for volume rollout in areas where spectrum is available.
Approximately 1 500 sites are undergoing planning and site acquisition.[44]
3.32
As at 30 December 2012, 21 RSPs had executed the NBN Co fixed wireless
trial agreement and 12 RSPs were offering a fixed wireless service.[45]
3.33
Based on ‘contracted rates negotiated with Delivery Partners and on
actual costs received to date NBN Co’s estimate of the capital costs for the
Fixed Wireless network remains within the $1.4 billion forecast in the 2012-15
Corporate Plan’.[46]
3.34
One issue of interest over the committee’s Fifth Review reporting period
was the development approval process for NBN Co fixed wireless towers in local
government areas.
3.35
The Victorian Government submission to the inquiry raised concerns with the
‘approach being taken by NBN Co to the fixed wireless rollout’ as demonstrated
by ‘events surrounding the proposal to build an NBN Co wireless tower in
the community of Napoleons in the Golden Plains Shire’.[47]
3.36
It was explained that the NBN Co plan had included Napoleons in the
fixed wireless rollout and that NBN Co (or its agents) had submitted a
development application for it and seven other sites in the Golden Plains
Shire, with the following outcomes:
n NBN Co was informed
on 20 January 2012 that their preferred site would not be approved
n alternative sites
were suggested by Council during negotiations
n one site was
investigated by NBN Co but the landholders would not agree
n the Napoleons
application was rejected in June 2012 by the Council on amenity grounds
n when the application
was rejected by Council NBN Co announced Napoleons would receive a satellite
service
n this service would
not be NBN Co’s Interim Satellite Solution, therefore services would not be
available until late 2015
n seven of the eight
applications were approved without issue.[48]
3.37
The Victorian Government noted that the Victorian planning system ‘contains
options that could be utilised, individually or in combination, in relation to
NBN Co telecommunications towers’, but that, in the Napoleons case, the NBN Co
is ‘choosing to not exercise any of these options’, including to ‘investigate
other sites suggested by Council’ and ‘appeal the Council decision to the
Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal’.[49]
3.38
The Victorian Government stated that this outcome would ‘result in long
term consequences for that community as a satellite service is a less capable service
than wireless. Satellite is considered to be a lesser service in comparison to fibre
and fixed wireless services due to the impact of latency’.[50]
The Victorian Government concluded:
There have been no indications from the Commonwealth that the
citizens of areas affected by this NBN Co policy will have opportunities to
improve their services at a later date. It is highly unlikely that alternatives
will be available to Napoleons from other providers as Commonwealth policy
settings mean NBN Co has an effective monopoly in the provision of fixed
broadband.
NBN Co’s policy of not taking full advantage of the options
available to it leaves NBN Co open to a perception of pressuring councils to
approve development applications. Councils will increasingly be aware that the
rejection of a NBN Co tower site development application will lead to NBN Co’s
default outcome, the provision of a lesser satellite service for their
communities…
It is the understanding of the Victorian Government that this
issue is not confined to Victoria. For a project of the size and national
significance of the NBN, the Victorian Government considers it vital that the initiative
is developed and implemented in a transparent manner. It is the responsibility
of the Commonwealth Government to ensure accountability of NBN Co to the
communities it is supposed to serve.[51]
3.39
The issue of community consultation concerning NBN Co’s fixed wireless
towers was also raised as an issue:
This submission is a brief summary of our recent experience and
that of other residents of Deuchar, Queensland and the lack of any sort of
consultation from NBN Co…
In the Southern Free Times newspaper dated Thursday, January the
10th, 2013 (whilst many residents were away) a development notice appeared in
relation to an application for a Material Change of use…
The notice gave scant detail and referred to the change of land
use to ‘Community Use—Telecommunication Facility…
Many residents were unaware of the application and the length
of time to lodge objections was not long enough. Given the time of year some
residents were unable to lodge their submissions within the time period…
In a narrow vote the application was approved by council…
We understand that there are many such towers now proposed
for the Southern Downs Area and are now aware of other small communities who
find themselves in our situation and are similarly being railroaded.[52]
Satellite Network
Background
3.40
This section of the report looks at issues associated with the satellite
network rollout for regional and remote Australia. (NBN Co’s performance
information for the satellite rollout is discussed in Chapter 2.)
3.41
The satellite network will cover ‘around three per cent’ of premises
outside of areas covered by fibre and fixed wireless networks.[53]
In the period before it launches its own satellite service in 2015—the Long
Term Satellite Service—the NBN Co is operating an Interim Satellite Service to
provide broadband services for regional and remote Australians who do not have
access to ‘metro comparable’ broadband.[54]
Rollout Progress
Interim Satellite Service
3.42
NBN Co’s Interim Satellite Service
(ISS)—also referred to as the First Release Satellite Service—was commercially
launched on 1 July 2011,
using spare capacity on existing satellites.[55]
The ISS acts as a transition between the Australian Broadband Guarantee Scheme,
which expired on 1 July 2011, and NBN Co’s Long Term Satellite Service, scheduled
for commercial service by mid-2015.[56]
3.43
Under the ISS, the satellite equipment and installation will be provided
by the NBN Co, at no cost to the end user for a standard installation, and peak
download speeds of up to 6Mbps will be available via participating RSPs.[57]
These services are available to consumers through NBN Co contracts with Optus
and IPStar.[58]
3.44
During the reporting period, Optus delivered a new Operational Support
System/Business Support System platform to support the ISS and successfully
migrated all RSPs, with the Shareholder Ministers’ Performance Report to the
committee noting that ‘RSP feedback has generally been positive’.[59]
3.45
Skymesh is seeking to offer the current ISS to a number of remote schools,
with ‘approximately 57 schools and related premises…set to be connected in the
first six to eight months of 2013, including some very remote Indigenous
schools and communities’.[60]
3.46
In terms of customer satisfaction with the ISS, the NBN Co explained
that it had ‘dimensioned 30 kilobits per second average busy-hour throughput’
and, as a result, it was hearing from the people getting the service that ‘they
are very happy with it compared to what they were getting before’.[61]
3.47
The Shareholder Ministers’ Performance Report further noted that,
following the commercial launch of the ISS, services continued to be activated
‘at a higher rate than forecast’.[62]
3.48
The NBN Co released ‘more detailed eligibility criteria’ for potential
rural and remote users of its ISS in May 2011, confirming that, ‘where high
demand exists first priority will be given to those people who have no access
to alternate broadband services, subject to a service qualification process’.[63]
From 1 July 2012, the eligibility criteria for the ISS was expanded to include
eligible education, health and local government facilities.[64]
3.49
Approximately 250 000 end users are eligible for the ISS, based on
current eligibility criteria.[65] The NBN Co explained the
increased coverage of the ISS from 165 000 premises in June 2012 to 250 000 premises
in December 2012:
When we look at the premises covered, it is based on the
calculation that is done by DBCDE on the eligible premises—in other words, what
is the footprint over which we have to provide a service? Those eligibility
rules were expanded between those two dates that you just talked about, which
means we ended up with a bigger coverage area…We have not passed any more; it
is just that the coverage has gone up because there are more premises we are
now obliged to serve.[66]
3.50
There is currently a 48 000 customer cap on the ISS.[67]
Total active ISS as at 31 December 2012 was 23 051, with 12 RSPs actively
selling services, and the total number of pending orders for the ISS as at 31 December
2012 was 1 368.[68]
3.51
Against this background, an issue of interest over the Fifth Review
reporting period was when the 48 000 customer cap on the ISS might be reached,
based on current take-up rates.
3.52
The committee heard that the number of premises currently connected to
the ISS is around 28 000.[69] The cap would therefore be
reached ‘[s]ome time next year’ and this would be before the launch date of the
LTSS in mid 2015.[70] This raised concerns
about what arrangements were in place for new customers wanting to access the
ISS once the cap is reached. The NBN Co responded:
We simply will not be able to serve them. There is no more
economically viable capacity that we can identify…
We have explored it and looked at it carefully. It just does
not make sense because the cost is really…astronomical. It is very high…
Something like three or four—multiples—of what is costing for
the 48,000.[71]
3.53
The NBN Co clarified that a number of customers would therefore miss out
on the ISS:
…we are going to have a gap in which we cannot provide
service to those people who are almost certainly going to want it. There is a
long lead time on designing and launching satellites. The good news is that we
have designed two specifically for Australia and they will come online in 2015.[72]
3.54
There was also interest in whether a number of spot beams were
approaching capacity in the ISS. The NBN Co commented it expected that ‘some of
those beams are going to exhaust some time next year’.[73]
Long Term Satellite Service
3.55
The NBN Co’s Long Term Satellite Service (LTSS) is scheduled for
commercial service by mid-2015.[74] The two major components
of the LTSS are a space segment and a ground segment.
3.56
In February 2012, Space Systems/Loral were awarded the contract to build
the two next-generation Ka-band satellites for the space segment.[75]
The contract is valued at approximately $620 million and followed a two-year
procurement process.[76] The planned launch date
for the two satellites remains unchanged from previous forecasts, at mid 2015. The
Stakeholder Ministers’ Fourth Performance Report to the committee noted that
the contract with Space Systems/Loral had ‘progressed well during the period’.[77]
3.57
On 4 March 2013, the NBN Co announced that Arianespace, the European
satellite launch company, had been awarded a contract worth up to $300 million
to launch the two NBN satellites.[78]
3.58
Previous committee reports have commented on the issue of orbital slot
allocation. In its Third Review report, the committee noted that the NBN Co
had ‘lodged coordination applications’ with the International
Telecommunications Union (ITU) for four orbital slots for its two commissioned
satellites, but that these slots were ‘yet to be secured from the ITU’.[79]
In its Fourth Review report, the committee stated that it would ‘seek future
evidence upon the…progress in obtaining orbital slots for the LTSS satellites’.[80]
3.59
Accordingly, there was continued interest over the Fifth Review reporting
period about progress in obtaining orbital slots for the two satellites. The
NBN Co clarified that:
Just to be clear: we are not negotiating with the ITU or
anyone; we are coordinating with other satellite operators. It is a very
standard process that the ITU facilitates basically by having a register that
advises everyone of all the activity going on around satellite frequency
coordination. We have just recently filed resolution 49 data, which has
been put into the ACMA, who have put it into the ITU. That basically puts into
the satellite community that we now have a genuine satellite being built,
contracted and progressing as planned and have a launch.[81]
3.60
The Stakeholder Ministers’ Performance Report further noted that the ITU
orbital slot coordination process ‘continued to progress’.[82]
3.61
There was also interest in the lead times for when equipment would start
being rolled out to facilitate switching over from the ISS to the LTSS in mid
2015. The NBN Co responded that:
We plan to do that around the time of the actual satellites
going operational. We are not looking to do that any earlier. Our current
corporate plan is to do that as the satellites become operational around
mid-2015…
We will still have the interim satellite in place, and there
will be a migration over a period of time. It looks like it will take probably
12 to 18 months to do that migration. It is not something we can organise a
workforce to do within a week or two and switch things over. It needs a
customer visit. It needs to be supported through a program right across
regional and rural Australia.[83]
3.62
In terms of the ground segment, the LTSS requires satellite ground
stations to be built across Australia to receive and transmit data signals. Negotiations
for 10 ground stations continued during the reporting period, with seven
contracts having been exchanged and negotiations for the remaining three sites
continuing in 2013.[84]
3.63
Ground stations are planned to be located in New South Wales (Wolumla,
Bourke and Broken Hill); South Australia (Ceduna); Tasmania (Geeveston);
Queensland (Roma); and Western Australia (Kalgoorlie, Geraldton, Carnarvon and
Wagerup).[85]
3.64
In October 2012, the NBN Co announced that it had selected Cockram
Corporation Pty Ltd and Perkins (WA) Pty Ltd to build the 10 ground stations,
with contracts awarded being worth up to $180 million and construction due to
be completed in 2015.[86] An estimated 20-30
construction workers will be required to build each facility, with a further 60
people expected to be employed nationwide to manage the service.[87]
3.65
In July 2012, the US satellite network specialist ViaSat was contracted
to supply the equipment for the 10 ground stations, as well as the equipment
to be installed in end user premises, with the contract worth approximately
$280 million.[88]
3.66
The NBN Co confirmed that cost estimates for the satellite service
remained within the Corporate Plan forecasts: ‘[b]ased on contracted rates
negotiated with Delivery Partners and on actual costs received to date NBN Co’s
estimate of the capital costs for the Satellite network remains within the $1.8
billion forecast in the 2012-15 Corporate Plan’.[89]
Additional Issues
Network Extensions
3.67
As set out in the NBN Co Corporate Plan 2012-15, the network extensions framework allows individuals,
businesses or governments to pay the ‘incremental cost of extension of the fibre or fixed wireless network to areas where it would not
otherwise be built’.[90]
3.68
There are three types of network extensions:
n Adjacent Fibre Network
Extensions—covering premises located on the edge of a fibre serving area module.
These premises can be individual (e.g. a house) or a group of premises (e.g. a group
of houses or a group of businesses in an industrial area);
n Large Fibre Network Extensions—covering
small communities or towns that are not planned to be serviced by fibre or individual
premises or multiple premises that cannot be considered for an Adjacent Fibre Network
Extension; and
n Fixed Wireless Network
Extensions—covering small communities or towns that are planned to be serviced by
satellite services.[91]
3.69
The committee has tracked the evolution of NBN Co’s network extension policy for the fibre
and fixed wireless networks over its previous reports. In its Second Review
report, the committee recommended that:
…as a matter of urgency, the NBN Co formalise and publicise
its policy for the provision of costing extensions to its planned National
Broadband Network fibre footprint, especially for regional and remote
Australia.[92]
3.70
In its Third Review report, the committee recommended that the NBN Co:
n …publicise the
[Network Extension] policy and its process for communities in the fixed
wireless and satellite service areas; and
n At the point of
announcing new areas within these footprints, ensure that the policy is
attached to media releases and known to the relevant local government
associations.[93]
3.71
Consistent with these recommendations, a network extension policy has
now been introduced. As the Shareholder Ministers’ Fourth
Report to the committee on the NBN rollout noted:
The Network Extension policy was
launched on the NBN Co website on 12 July 2012. The policy states
that NBN Co must recover only the incremental cost of
building any Network Extensions.
The policy outlines the process and criteria for
individuals,
businesses or
government organisations to submit a request for NBN Co to deliver an
extension of the existing fibre footprint or
fixed wireless
footprint beyond that which is planned.[94]
3.72
The Shareholder Ministers’ Performance Report further notes that training on the network extension process and policy for NBN
Co contact centre staff is scheduled
for
early 2013.[95]
3.73
On occasion, the issue of extending the fibre footprint can indicate
community concern about perceived differences in quality between the services
available on the fibre network from those available on the fixed wireless and
satellite networks. The committee received evidence on this matter over the
Fifth Review reporting period:
I live in
Fernmount, a
small
hamlet of 200 houses 4km
East of Bellingen.
Unfortunately we are unable to
obtain
fibre to the premises if
and when Bellingen
receives the NBN
roll
out.
I believe you are going to receive a great deal of [complaint]
as a result of the NBNCO policy for low-density regional communities. Currently
we are facing a Hobson’s choice as we are being offered fixed wireless broadband
which will only ever be a 2nd rate service if the rest of the network is installed
post-September 2013.[96]
Deuchar, Queensland is a rural community made up of
predominately lifestyle properties located between Allora and Warwick on the
Southern Downs…
Under the current NBN rollout proposal the Optic Fibre cable
will run through our area on the way to service Warwick…
The NBNco Fixed Wireless solution delivers an inferior
product to Rural Australia…[97]
3.74
Such comments point to the importance of continued community
consultation and awareness raising by the NBN Co concerning the three
technologies being used to rollout the NBN to regional and remote Australia, as
well as about how local government and regional communities might utilise the network
extension program.
3.75
As at 31 December 2012,
the NBN Co had received 85 network extension applications.[98] One extension is
currently being constructed, with eight under commercial discussion.[99]
Mobile Networks
3.76
Mobile services and mobile backhaul in regional Australia, in the
context of the NBN rollout, were raised as issues over the committee’s Fifth
Review reporting period.
3.77
The 2011-12 Regional Telecommunications Independent Review Committee
(the Sinclair Review) report had previously pointed to a need to improve mobile
coverage in regional and remote Australia and one of its recommendations was that
‘NBN Co engage with mobile carriers about using NBN fixed-wireless towers to
also improve mobile coverage (recommendation 4.5)’.[100]
3.78
In its response to the Sinclair Review, the Australian Government agreed
with this recommendation, noting that the ‘construction of the NBN fixed
wireless network provides an opportunity for carriers to expand their mobile
phone coverage in certain locations across regional Australia by co‐locating equipment in
new towers built to support the network’.[101]
3.79
NBN Co’s response to this matter was discussed in the committee’s
Fourth Review report, which noted that:
…NBN Co has undertaken to develop a Facilities Access Policy
for towers, duct and depot space, which would allow access seekers to obtain
terms, prices and ordering and provisioning processes for accessing NBN Co facilities.
This would allow for the co-location of mobile network equipment on NBN wireless
sites…The NBN Co has already reached reciprocal agreements with Telstra and
Optus for access to each others’ facilities, including NBN Co built and owned wireless
towers.[102]
3.80
However, the Victorian Government submission to the committee’s Fifth
Review argued that:
The Commonwealth Government response to the recommendations
regarding mobile coverage indicates a lack of understanding of the practical
requirements of the mobile telecommunications carriers.
A tower built to satisfy the fixed wireless requirements of
NBN Co will not necessarily be suitable for the carriers to co-locate.
Therefore carriers need to be involved in the planning stages. For example:
n space required on
each tower—a tower built to NBN Co needs only may not be high enough or
structurally appropriate to allow any co-location
n power requirements
will change if carriers co-locate
n ground equipment
housing capacity and security capabilities need to be considered…[103]
3.81
The Sinclair Review report also included a ‘proposal for a co-investment
program, jointly funded by the Commonwealth and interested states or territory
governments, to expand the mobile coverage footprint in regional Australia
(recommendation 3.2)’.[104]
3.82
In its response to the Sinclair Review, the Australian Government noted
that it would ‘review the impact of the NBN fixed wireless network on improving
mobile coverage in regional areas before making any commitments to fund a new
program to extend mobile coverage’.[105]
3.83
However, the Victorian Government submission to the committee’s Fifth Review
observed that:
The expectation that the NBN Co fixed wireless network will,
in itself, improve mobile coverage is flawed. NBN Co is not tasked with
addressing mobile coverage in the Commonwealth’s Statement of Expectations and
this task is not included in its 2012-15 Corporate Plan.
NBN Co should be involved as a partner in efforts to improve
mobile coverage where opportunities exist to co-locate facilities. However, it
is not practical to expect NBN Co to plan and deploy its fixed wireless network
to deliver better mobile coverage and to achieve its coverage targets in a
timely fashion. Either NBN Co will prioritise the fixed wireless network, in
which case its impact on regional mobile coverage will be minimal, or it will
face conflicting objectives.[106]
3.84
In response to this matter, the DBCDE highlighted that:
The government agrees that NBN Co and mobile carriers should
work together to take advantage of the NBN fixed wireless towers to improve
mobile coverage in regional Australia, where possible, and we note that NBN Co,
Telstra and Optus have recently entered into agreements to share tower
infrastructure. This is obviously a positive development towards improved
mobile coverage in regional and rural Australia…
In addition, NBN Co has negotiated with carriers to secure
further mutually beneficial arrangements which involve NBN Co accessing or
constructing towers on sites that have been set aside for future development.
This would apply when a carrier has a site for which it has all or some of the
necessary approvals, but are not planning to build a tower in the near future.
If such a site is considered appropriate for the fixed wireless network, NBN Co
will initiate the construction process. This has the potential of seeing the
networks expand at a quicker rate than they otherwise would.[107]
3.85
NBN Co further explained that to assist in the governance of specific
co-location requests and applications, the NBN Co has ‘established a number of
framework agreements with third parties, including mobile network operators,
which outline the process and procedures to co-locate on NBN Co’s network
infrastructure sites. These agreements address operational, commercial and
technical requirements for all incoming site share requests’.[108]
3.86
In terms of the Government’s response to the Sinclair Review that it
would ‘review the impact of the NBN fixed wireless network on improving mobile
coverage in regional areas before making any commitments to fund a new program
to extend mobile coverage’, the DBCDE further noted that ‘[d]evelopments in
this area are being monitored by the government. A date for this review will be
determined once the NBN fixed wireless network has further progressed’.[109]
3.87
Vodaphone Hutchison Australia (VHA) reinforced the ‘central role’ that
the NBN Co could have in improving mobile services:
We feel now that there is increasing agreement that the NBN
can play a central role in improving mobile services…
We welcome the committee’s last report, in the sense that
they have identified that delivering mobile services with the NBN is an
important and exciting opportunity. The committee is right to identify that
there are significant opportunities for the NBN and the committee was right to
identify that more needs to be done to enhance those opportunities. We are
pleased now to be getting some traction in this regard. We are having good
discussions with NBN about this...[110]
3.88
As VHA further commented:
…the NBN presents outstanding opportunities to improve both
coverage and choice for regional consumers and they should be pursued as a
matter of priority. This will ensure the full benefits of the NBN can be
realised. Convergence of fixed and
mobile/wireless technologies means that the old paradigm of separate fixed and
mobile services is no longer relevant and a more holistic approach to…
[telecommunications] infrastructure should be the new public policy focus…
Given the importance of mobile and wireless technologies to
the economy it is imperative that there be a greater recognition of
infrastructure convergence and the benefits that NBN could deliver by enhancing
the delivery of mobile solutions.
The NBN and mobile technologies should be seen as
complementary technologies rather than as competing alternates... VHA therefore
submits that the NBN should embrace the convergence of technology and develop
products with this in mind.[111]
3.89
VHA also emphasised the broader role that the NBN could have in
improving mobile services, clarifying that this encompassed both the NBN Co
fixed wireless and fibre networks:
It is important to recognise that what we are talking about
when we are talking about mobile services is not just NBN fixed wireless
service—in fact that is actually the least useful opportunity for the NBN
network.
What is going to be of most use to mobile services is NBN’s
fibre network to provide access for mobile services. As we have talked about
previously, wireless services use a base station to connect your mobile phones
but then they need transmission services to take the traffic out of the cell.
That is where we see the most important opportunities for the NBN and mobile
services.[112]
3.90
VHA pointed to the high costs involved in mobile backhaul, noting that
the NBN could be used to provide lower cost backhaul options: ‘[t]he fundamental
challenge, particularly for competitor mobile services such as Vodafone and
Optus, is the build economics in regional Australia…We think the policymakers
need to take a more holistic approach to solving this problem, and part of that
is using the NBN to overcome the very high costs of regional backhaul’.[113]
3.91
On this point, Allen and Overy/Venture Consulting commented that there
is ‘yet an unexplored option to review the integration of the NBN fixed
wireless network and the private sector regional mobile networks that often use
common towers and backhaul’, noting that mobile carriers ‘may be interested in
investing in this component and also in aligned operating arrangements’.[114]
3.92
VHA suggested that the provision of mobile backhaul might represent an
additional revenue stream for the NBN Co: ‘[i]n addition to enabling mobile
expansion, this would also significantly improve the business case for NBN by
adding an additional revenue stream through the use of its fibre network for
mobile backhaul’.[115]
3.93
However, Pipe Networks Pty Ltd (PIPE) offered an alternative view on
this matter. In its submission to the committee, PIPE explained that it owns
and operates the ‘third-largest metropolitan fibre-optic network in Australia’,
using this network to ‘provide dark fibre and ethernet services for backhaul
and resale’ to many other carriers, carriage service providers and ISPs
supplying fixed-line services, as well as backhaul for a number of wireless
carriers and Vodafone Hutchinson Australia’s mobile telecommunications network.[116]
3.94
PIPE emphasised that its backhaul services had enabled these companies
to ‘engage in infrastructure-based competition with Telstra’, resulting in ‘significantly
increased competition in retail markets for Internet, fixed-line and more
recently mobile telephony services’.[117]
3.95
As PIPE further explained, the market for fibre backhaul services in Australia
is serviced by a number of providers, both large existing providers and smaller,
growing businesses. The current fibre footprint is ‘naturally denser in larger metropolitan
areas, but is ever expanding’, with this continued expansion being in the ‘long-term
interests of end users as more and more people are capable of being serviced or
the edge of the nearest networks moves ever closer’.[118]
PIPE therefore concluded that it had concerns about the NBN Co’s possible entry
into this market:
Investment into larger network extensions may only come about
upon securing an anchor tenant, such as a mobile provider. For example PIPE’s agreement
with Vodafone Hutchinson Australia in late 2010 extended PIPE’s network by approximately
900 kilometers of new fibre over two years, which at the time of agreement
represented a 60 percent increase to PIPE’s existing network footprint…
Intervention into this market by a taxpayer funded entity such
as NBN Co will reduce network extension by existing and emerging private fibre providers
to the detriment of the industry, the market and end-users.[119]
3.96
The NBN Co Corporate Plan 2012-15 notes that the NBN Co has ‘received
requests from the industry to develop products that are suitable for use as
mobile backhaul’ and that ‘NBN Co is considering these requests and evaluating
whether to develop products suitable for use as mobile backhaul’ but ‘no
decision has yet been made’.[120]
Concluding Comments
Fibre Network
3.97
The committee notes that the NBN fibre rollout in regional Australia is
progressing. It is critical that the NBN Co continues to balance construction between
metropolitan and regional locations and meet its projected rollout timelines.
3.98
Given the significance of the NBN fibre rollout to regional Australia
and that the NBN Co is following design principles, as set out in its Corporate
Plan 2012-15, that include balancing construction between metropolitan and
regional locations,[121] it would be useful for
the NBN Co to provide further information on the fibre rollout in regional
communities. This might include rollout performance information for regional
Australia and further information on prioritisation of regional locations and
the NBN Co’s definitions of ‘metro’ and ‘non-metro’ (and other such
definitions used in reporting documentation).
Fixed Wireless Network
3.99
The committee notes progress with the rollout of the fixed wireless
network in regional and remote Australia, and that increasing numbers of NBN Co
development proposals for fixed wireless network infrastructure are therefore
being lodged in local government areas.
3.100
In terms of this development approval process, the committee is aware
that the NBN Co and its design and construction partners are continuing to work
with local government to identify appropriate locations for fixed wireless
network infrastructure.[122] Planning tribunals
under various state and territory legal systems provide options for appeal.
3.101
The committee points to the need for the NBN Co to continue to consult
with state governments, local councils and regional communities in a timely
manner on the implementation of the fixed wireless network—in particular,
concerning the planning and development approval processes for wireless towers.
The NBN Co needs to continue to make clear its policy on this matter. There
would also be benefit in the NBN Co increasing its public reporting on progress
in this area (including numbers of development approvals lodged, approved,
rejected and appealed) and on its communication and consultation activities
concerning this matter.
3.102
The committee further points to the importance of continued community
consultation and awareness raising by the NBN Co concerning the three
technologies being used to rollout the NBN to regional and remote Australia, as
well as about how local government and regional communities might utilise the network
extension program.
Satellite Network
3.103
The committee notes progress with NBN Co’s satellite network rollout for
regional and remote Australia. However, it recognises the need to closely
monitor take-up rates for the ISS before NBN Co’s LTSS comes into operation in
mid-2015, given that the 48 000 customer cap on the ISS is predicted to be
reached some time in 2014, based on current take-up rates.[123]
3.104
Given that the eligibility criteria for the ISS (subject to a service
qualification process) include education, health and local government
facilities in rural and remote communities, as well as Indigenous schools and
communities, there is concern about what arrangements might be put in place by
the NBN Co for new customers wanting to access the ISS once the cap is reached.
3.105
The committee points to the importance of the NBN Co closely monitoring
the current rate of ISS activations and, prior to the customer cap on the ISS
being reached, consulting with relevant stakeholders and the Australian
community on options for establishing cost efficient arrangements to ensure
that education, health and local government facilities in rural and remote
communities and other individuals determined to be most in need of access to
the ISS are still able to access the service. If additional satellite capacity becomes
available at a competitive cost, the customer cap on the ISS may be able to be
increased.
3.106
The committee also notes progress with NBN Co’s LTSS. Given that the
LTSS is scheduled for commercial service by mid-2015, the committee emphasises
the importance of the NBN Co continuing to regularly publicly report on
progress in terms of obtaining orbital slots for the two satellites, satellite
construction and launch dates, planning approvals and construction of ground
stations, and equipment supply to meet planned timeframes.
Network Extensions
3.107
The committee is pleased
to note that a network
extension policy for the fibre and fixed wireless networks has now been
introduced and widely communicated.[124] The committee will be interested in the future outcomes of this policy, particularly for communities in regional Australia.
3.108
The committee points to the importance of continued community
consultation and awareness raising by the NBN Co concerning the three
technologies being used to rollout the NBN to regional and remote Australia, as
well as about how local government and regional communities might utilise the network
extension program.
Mobile Networks
3.109
The committee notes the NBN Co’s progress in working to facilitate
access to mobile providers with a view to using the NBN to improve mobile
telecommunications in regional and remote Australia.[125]
The committee is aware that the NBN Co has developed a Facilities Access Policy
for towers, duct and depot space, to allow access seekers to obtain terms, prices
and ordering and provisioning processes for accessing NBN Co facilities.[126]
The committee encourages the NBN Co to publicly report progress in terms of the
implementation and outcomes of this policy. The NBN Co is also encouraged to continue
to publicly report on the impact of its fixed wireless network in improving
mobile coverage in regional and remote areas.
3.110
The committee reiterates the recommendation in its Fourth Review report
that the Government should support the NBN Co to continue to ‘explore the synergies between fixed
and mobile telecommunications networks with a
view to using the National Broadband
Network to improve mobile telecommunications’.[127]
The NBN Co is encouraged to include a statement on this area in its revised
Corporate Plan.
3.111
The committee also notes the importance of continued industry
consultation in terms of the NBN Co developing products suitable for use as
mobile backhaul, including consideration of the potential impact of these
services on the existing market in this area. To further clarify this matter, it
would be useful for the NBN Co to include an updated statement on mobile
backhaul in its revised Corporate Plan.
Recommendation 2 |
3.112
|
The committee recommends the NBN Co Limited revised
Corporate Plan and the six-monthly Shareholder Ministers’ Performance Reports
to the committee include further information on the National Broadband
Network fibre rollout in regional Australia.
|
Recommendation 3 |
3.113
|
The committee recommends NBN Co Limited and the Department of
Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy closely monitor the current
rate of Interim Satellite Service (ISS) activations and, prior to the
customer cap on the ISS being reached:
n consult
with relevant stakeholders and the Australian community on options for
establishing cost efficient arrangements to ensure that education, health and
local government facilities in rural and remote communities and other
individuals determined to be most in need of access to the ISS are still able
to access the service; and
n consider
increasing the customer cap on the ISS, if additional satellite capacity becomes
available at a competitive cost.
|