Dissenting Report
This Dissenting Report sets out the views of Coalition
Members of the Committee on the Telecommunications Legislation Amendment (Fibre
Deployment) Bill 2011 (the Bill). The Coalition recommends that the amendments
referred to herein are made to the Bill.
The Bill forms part of the package of legislation concerning
the establishment of the National Broadband Network (NBN).
The Bill deals with the provision of fibre to all types of
new developments (including broadacre estates, urban infill and urban renewal
projects.) These are generally referred to as ‘greenfields sites’ in the NBN
context. By contrast, a ‘brownfields site’ is an existing premise, already
connected to the existing telecommunications network, which is now to receive a
new fibre connection to the NBN.
The Coalition agrees that it is highly desirable to
encourage the rollout of fibre infrastructure in new developments. While it
costs more to install fibre than copper in a new development, the incremental
cost is much less than the cost of installing fibre in brownfields sites. The
Government’s stated policy is that in developments of 100 homes or less Telstra
will install copper. The Coalition members believe this approach risks
wasteful duplication with copper presumably being overbuilt within a few years
if it is within the fibre footprint. On any view connecting greenfields
developments to fibre must be a key priority given the cost advantage over
brownbuild fibre overbuilds referred to above.
Coalition Members believe that, in designing the policy
rules for greenfields sites, Labor has committed the same policy errors as in
the rest of its NBN policy. Labor’s approach to the objective of improving
Australia’s broadband infrastructure is to establish a government owned company
to build a network; expend enormous amounts of taxpayers’ money in funding the
operations of that company; give that company monopoly powers; and have that
company carry out every possible aspect of this enormous task.
The Coalition is opposed to this policy approach. We believe
it is far too expensive; it is very bad for competition in broadband and
telecommunications; and in a large part of the market it is unnecessary as the
private sector can do the job faster, more efficiently and more cheaply once
appropriate ground rules are established. (We have however consistently
acknowledged that in rural and remote areas there is likely to be market
failure and there is a strong case for public expenditure to improve broadband
services.)
The policy scheme of this Bill is that:
- The Minister can declare, in respect of a new development, that
any fixed line installed must be optical fibre;
- In all new developments, unless exempted, developers must install
fibre-ready infrastructure (such as underground ducting or ‘pit and pipe’ and
poles to string overhead cables) meeting specifications set by the NBN;
- NBN must (as the provider of last resort) install fibre cable in
developments where developers have installed compliant fibre-ready
infrastructure.
Coalition Members believe that this policy scheme
unnecessarily assigns the central role to NBN Co – when the evidence the
inquiry received demonstrates that there is a vigorous private market for the
construction of fibre infrastructure in new developments. There are a number
of competitive greenfields operators (CGOs) active in this market, and
Coalition Members believe that this market should be encouraged not stifled.
Coalition Members believe this Bill should be amended for
three main reasons.
- The regime established by the Bill is unnecessarily slow and
bureaucratic for property developers.
- The Bill as presently drafted represents a missed opportunity to
take advantage of the existence of the CGOs to impose effective competitive and
cost discipline on NBN Co.
- The regime established by the Bill is damaging to competition in
the market for the provision of new fibre infrastructure.
We expand further on our views below, and describe two
amendments which we believe would address these issues.
Arrangements unnecessarily slow and bureaucratic for Property Developers
The regime established by the Bill
is unnecessarily cumbersome, slow and bureaucratic for property developers. At
a time when Australia is facing a growing housing shortage, the arrangements
mandated by this Bill add expense and delay for those wishing to build new
housing estates. Despite the government’s rhetoric, in practical terms the Bill
gives developers a very strong disincentive to deal with operators other than
NBN Co.
In turn, this leaves developers at the mercy of NBN Co’s
responsiveness and timeliness. The NBN Co will become a bottleneck through
which all property developments must pass before they can be completed and
brought to market. The downstream consequences for Australians wishing to
purchase new housing are likely to include increased delay and expense.
The HIA highlighted the requirement of developers for
certainty about what is required, who will undertake the work and how much the
work will cost and what time frame the work will be delivered. In addition,
these planning decisions should be able to be made in a short period of time
with ease. Otherwise there will be delay in the delivery of projects. The HIA
stated:
... the legislation needs to make it very clear who is
responsible for the delivery and that there are certain obligations on the
provider to do that in a very timely way, otherwise it will delay development.
I appreciate that there are negotiations in the feasibility and planning
arrangements, but there needs to be that level of certainty for developers so
they know who is going to do it, who is going to pay for it and when it can be
done. It should not take more than a couple of phone calls and a meeting to
sort out it being put into the critical path of the development, otherwise
those projects will be delayed whilst certain things are waiting for a provider
to provide that infrastructure.[1]
Missed opportunity to impose competitive and cost discipline on NBN Co
The Bill as presently drafted
represents a missed opportunity to take advantage of the existence of the CGOs
to impose effective competitive and cost discipline on NBN Co. If there were a
regime in which developers had a viable option to use a CGO to build out fibre
networks in their developments, then developers would be likely to do this if
the CGO could build the network more cheaply, quickly and conveniently. This
would produce a more efficient outcome if it meant that infrastructure in new
developments were built at lower cost than if it were done by NBN Co under a
monopoly.
Evidence provided to the inquiry demonstrated that there is
a nascent but increasingly active market in which a number of CGOs compete to
secure contracts from developers to build out fibre networks in their
developments. As the Greenfields Fibre Operators Association (GFOA) told the
Committee:
We are an alliance of leading fibre to the home operators and
carriers in the greenfields across Australia. Our members are OPENetworks,
Service Elements, TransACT, Comverge, Broadcast Engineering Services Australia
and Pivit.[2]
The GFOA explained the achievements of its members in
deploying fibre optic infrastructure to homes across Australia, in the course
of the ordinary business of those members.
Since 2000, the GFOA members have been designing, building and
operating advanced broadband networks in greenfields. Some have even designed
optical fibre equipment that is still used throughout the world in optical
fibre networks today. GFOA members connect or pass over 400,000 homes. We have
a further 350,000 homes, potentially, either under development contracts or
within the footprint of our existing networks capable of being connected. The
members deliver high-speed data, internet, voice, free to air, pay TV and many
other digital services, including CCTV, security services, building services,
building management, utility management and community management services as
well as a raft of other wi-fi and other forms of services. ..
It is interesting that, without having to tap into the USO
funds, we have been able to spread our networks throughout the greenfields,
whilst there has been no encouragement by government to address the fact that
Telstra was running around using the USO funds to provide a copper network, a
very antiquated network, throughout that same decade.[3]
Even Telstra has conceded the existence of this competitive
market in the installation of fibre networks in new developments. Telstra
stated:
Traditionally as the USO provider we have been deploying
copper based infrastructure at the request of developers. More recently a
competitive fibre deployment industry had arisen and a number of providers,
including Telstra, deployed fibre in many new developments under contract to
the developer.[4]
The government’s stated policy is that developers should be
free to use either NBN Co, or a competing provider, to build out fibre networks
in their developments. On 9 December 2010, the Minister for Broadband,
Communications and the Digital Economy announced:
It has been a consistent feature of the Government’s policy
in new developments that there should be room for competing providers. This
continues to be the case. Developers will be able to source fibre from
competing fibre providers if they wish. Providers can compete to provide
infrastructure in new developments, for example, by offering more tailored
solutions to developers or more expeditious delivery.[5]
There is a similar statement in the Government’s Statement
of Expectations with NBN Co. in relation to fibre in new developments. The
Statement of Expectations stipulates that NBN Co’s role as a wholesaler of last
resort within its fibre footprint enables it to:
... use whatever operational arrangements it chooses to
service new developments, including sub-contracting and build-operate-transfer
arrangements.[6]
Evidence from the GFOA highlighted the potential benefit to
taxpayers of the cost efficiencies which could be achieved if NBN Co were
subject to cost discipline from CGOs who may well be able to connect new
premises to a fibre network more cheaply. GFOA put the view that CGOs can
install fibre networks which are NBN Co fibre network equivalent or better for approximately
$1500 per lot in comparison to NBN Co’s which cost approximately double that
amount at $3000 to install. GFOA stated:
NBN Co Agreements with Developers, who have already applied
for 133,000 new lot connections in Greenfield developments since 1 January
2011, evidences that the cost of each connection is currently averaging over
$3000 per lot (excluding any back haul construction costs). Current prices for
GFOA networks that equal or exceed the current functional performance of NBN Co
networks are up to $1500 per lot (excluding any back haul construction costs).
FTA TV and Pay TV may add $300 per lot.[7]
TransACT stated that the approximate cost depending on
choice of provider and specification used, of installation of a fibre network
per premise is up to $3500. TransACT stated:
The ballpark type numbers indicate that pit and pipe is
somewhere in the order of $500 to $1,000 a premise and a turnkey solution is
anywhere up to $3,500 a premise depending on who deploys it and what the
specification is.[8]
The Housing Industry Association (HIA) advised that
developers reported a cost of installing Fibre-to-the Premises (FTTP) is in the
range of $2500 to $3500 per premise and with additional installation costs,
taxes, charges and developer margins, the cost will be up to the order of
$5000. The HIA stated:
Based on the numbers provided to HIA, the average cost to the
developer per block for FTTP is in the range of $2500 ‐ $3500. When combined with costs
associated with the additional installation requirements within the home, and
including taxes and charges and developer/builder margins, the retail cost to
the consumer will be up to the order of $5000.[9]
Under the policy framework as presently established in the
Bill, developers have a very strong disincentive to choose any operator other
than NBN Co. The developer faces a requirement to install fibre ready
infrastructure, which will cost around $800 per lot according to the
Explanatory Memorandum. Beyond that, however, the developer has two options.
The first option is to do nothing more, in the knowledge that in a few years’
time NBN Co will come along and install fibre at its own expense in the
development.
The second option is to contract with a CGO to install fibre
in the development. Based upon the $1500 per premises figure provided in
evidence by the GFOA, this will expose the developer to an incremental $700 per
premises. It is very unlikely that developers will incur this expense if they
are not required to do so. Given this economic reality, it is highly misleading
for the government to claim that its policy leaves open the option for
developers to engage a competitor to NBN Co.
The Department of Broadband, Communications and the Digital
Economy (DBCDE) argued that it is unclear whether the costs outlined by the
GFOA are based on a like with like comparison. The DBCDE stated:
The department is not aware of the basis for the GFOA’s claim
in relation to NBN Co’s average costs in new developments, and it is unclear
whether the GFOA’s claims about the costs of its networks and NBN Co’s are
based on a like with like comparison.[10]
Coalition Members believe that DBCDE’s comment misses the
point. The evidence suggests that there is at least the potential to realise
cost savings. The way to find out whether such savings can in fact be realised
is to establish a market structure in which genuine competition can operate.
If developers are able to choose a provider other than NBN Co to build the
network in their development, and such a provider can build the network more
cheaply than NBN Co, then the market will operate accordingly and savings will
be realised. The matter should be tested by the market – and the legislative
framework should facilitate the operation of a market – rather than being
dismissed by stroke of a bureaucrat’s pen.
Damaging to competition in the market for the provision of new fibre
infrastructure
The regime established by the Bill is damaging to
competition in the market for the provision of new fibre infrastructure. Today,
as is clear from evidence provided by GFOA there is a nascent but increasingly
active market in which CGOs compete to secure contracts from developers to
build out fibre networks in their developments. In some cases, the CGO builds
the network and then also operates as a retail service provider, providing
services over the network to residents in the development.
The regime established by the Bill damages competition for
several reasons. First, by exposing CGOs to competition from a government
funded operator which is prepared to install fibre at zero cost to a developer
(once the developer has incurred the expense of building trenches and other
‘fibre ready facilities’), the regime will effectively make it impossible for
such CGOs to compete.
CGOs will be at a fundamental cost disadvantage because NBN
Co is prepared to install fibre at zero cost, incurring a loss on the
installation which it presumably hopes to recoup over time from service
revenues.
The second reason that the regime in the Bill damages
competition is because the standards for a ‘fibre ready facility’ (such as a
pit) required to be built in greenfields developments will in practical terms
be set by NBN Co. Under proposed section 372W, a fibre ready facility (which a
developer has an obligation to install) is defined as one which amongst other
things satisfies such conditions as are specified by the Minister. In practical
terms, this will mean that standards will be set by NBN Co, as the Minister is
likely to simply set the standards which the NBN Co wants.
The Statement of Expectations makes it clear that the
technical standards for fibre infrastructure will be specified by NBN Co. The
statement provides that:
The Government expects NBN Co to provide guidance on
technical specifications as early as possible. In doing so, NBN Co should
consult with the Communications Alliance and the [Australian Communications and
Media Association] ACMA, and should use the well established processes to
deliver a national standard.[11]
Despite the reference to existing industry standards setting
processes (particularly the Communications Alliance which has the
responsibility for determining industry wide standards under the present
industry arrangements), it is clear from this that NBN Co’s wishes will
prevail.
The risks to competition of such an approach are profound. It
is well established that a dominant operator with the power to set technical
standards will use that power as a tool to maintain its dominance. It is for
this very reason that the power to set technical standards, which had
previously been held by the government owned monopolist Telecom Australia, was
in 1989 transferred to an independent body.
A number of contributors to the inquiry put the view that
the NBN fibre infrastructure requirements are not industry endorsed and
provisions in the Bill further empower the Minister to impose standards
according to NBN Co requirements. This will have the effect of imposing greater
costs on developers to install fibre infrastructure and also change industry
specification requirements without industry endorsement.
TransACT commented that anyone who has a carrier licence and
is suitably accredited should be in a position to set a specification. TransACT
stated that it wanted to avoid a situation where there is an ‘over-engineered
specification.’[12]
DBCDE’s response to this concern is unpersuasive. DBCDE
claims that the Bill does not impose NBN Co specifications on the industry.
Rather the Bill provides ‘a reserve power (to the Minister) to fast-track’ the
standardisation (which may be required for the NBN to operate an appropriate
level or speed) process if required.[13] In effect, DBCDE is
conceding the point: the Minister has the final call on the standards and given
the policy priority of rolling out the NBN, the Minister will set the standards
that NBN Co wants.
DBCDE stated that NBN Co ‘specifications will also be
provided to the Communications Alliance (CA) with a view to having these
specifications endorsed for general use by industry as soon as possible.’[14]
This is a fundamental change from the present arrangements under which the CA
sets industry wide specifications; now its role is to be reduced to
rubber-stamping specifications determined by NBN Co.
The third reason the Bill damages competition is because it
forms part of a regime which renders unviable a business model typically used
by CGOs today. Typically a developer will contract with a CGO for that CGO to
build a fibre access network in a new development, and then to operate as a
retail service provider, providing services over that network. The CGO is able
to contract with the developer at a lower per premises cost than would
otherwise be required, because it also expects to earn revenues from the
delivery of services over the network.
This business model is now rendered unviable because of the
provisions recently added as Parts 7 and 8 of the Telecommunications Act, as
part of the package of legislative measures dealing with the NBN. These
provisions impose require that the operator of a telecommunications network
used, or capable of being used, to supply a superfast carriage service (over 25
Mbps) to consumers or small business:
- must offer a layer 2 bitstream service (that is, a wholesale
service)
- must not offer services over that network to retail customers and
may only offer wholesale services.
These two requirements are designed to suit the business
model of NBN Co: an extremely large scale business, operating on a wholesale
only basis, with the benefit of near limitless funding from government. But
under Parts 7 and 8 they must also be met by CGOs – which in the main are
relatively small scale private sector businesses.
The policy intent is, quite deliberately, to make it very
hard for competitors to NBN Co to sustain their business model. Coalition
Members believe this policy intent is wholly misjudged and precisely the
opposite of a sensible policy approach to encouraging competition.
The consequence has been to weaken the market for the
competitive provision of fibre networks in new developments.
First Proposed Coalition Amendment
To address the difficulties caused for the property
development industry by the Bill, and to impose additional cost discipline on
NBN Co, the Bill should include measures which remove the disincentive for
developers to use CGOs to install fibre infrastructure.
The proposed amendment to the Bill would insert a new
section 372CA Purchase of installed optical networks by NBN co. which
would be contained in Division 2 – Deployment of optical fibre lines.
Proposed new section 372CA is intended to enable
developers whose development project has an installed fibre network (which is
in compliance with specifications as determined by the Minister) to have the
option to require NBN Co to purchase that network at a reasonable price (as
determined by the Minister in consideration of certain market prices and
costs).
The rationale for this amendment is:
- Give developers an incentive to use CGOs in the knowledge that if
they pay a CGO a per connection basis, they will be able to recoup that cost
(up to a limit specified by the Minister) by selling the connection to NBN Co
- Ensure that developers have additional choices beyond the
government’s default option in which when they build a new development they
will install fibre ready facilities, but there will be no live network
installed (meaning that residents in the development may need to wait several
years - until such time as NBN Co is ready to come along and roll out fibre in
the development – before they receive an active broadband service delivered
over a fibre connection)
- Benefit end users – incoming residents of new developments – by
maximising the likelihood that when residents move in, they will be provided
immediately with an active broadband service delivered over a fibre connection
- Impose a cost discipline upon NBN Co by requiring it to purchase
connections at a reasonable price which will be set at a price no greater than
the NBN Co’s own average cost of installing a connection. This means that if
NBN Co’s competitors can build connections at a lower charge than NBN Co, there
will be a cost saving to NBN Co and ultimately the taxpayer.
Coalition Members of the Committee sought the views of
witnesses at hearings regarding the proposed amendment. Mr Turnbull described
the amendment as follows:
It has been put to us that a more efficient approach would be
as follows: a developer could, if he or she chose, get an appropriately
qualified firm to connect all of the premises in their new development, be it
large or small, with fibre in accordance with specifications that were laid
down by ACMA, in consultation with the NBN and that, if the developer did that,
he or she could then require NBN to acquire that fibre from the developer at an
agreed price. When I say 'an agreed price,' I mean a price that would be a rate
set out either in the legislation or in regulations. The argument is that this
would mean a developer could take the matter into his own hands, get on with
the job, cable the development in a way that meets all the other construction
timetables they have got and would not be disadvantaged financially by doing
that. That has been put to us by some organisations that are no doubt members
or affiliates or fellow travellers of yours. I want to see what you think about
it.[15]
The Urban Development Institute of Australia (UDIA) stated
that the amendment is a pragmatic suggestion and would provide greater
certainty for developers. The UDIA stated:
... that is a pragmatic suggestion. In relation to the
certainty question you asked me before, that is what is confronted by
developers—how and when are things actually going to be done? Whatever brings
around greater certainty for purchasers of those properties that all the
utilities are actually there and are available and can be handed over to them
and the greater that certainty is, the better it will be.[16]
OptiComm commented that the amendment would provide
advantages in terms of maintaining diversity within the fibre provider market.
OptiComm stated:
... there would be some advantages in what you are saying to
what is currently proposed. That allows diversity in the greenfield. As I have
said, we have been successful. Not only do we offer broadband and voice but we
offer a number of other services that some developers find attractive. It would
still allow them to do that and allow them to keep that network operating
through companies like ourselves or allows them the offer to transfer that
ownership to NBN Co. I think that is what you are suggesting. We would never
love to build a network and see it go to someone else, but I think the concept
is better than where we stand today.[17]
TransACT was supportive of the amendment and commented that
a situation where different parties are responsible for installing a fibre
network is tripartite and does not offer the best overall outcome. TransACT
stated:
Essentially, we believe that having a situation where the
developer puts pit and pipe into the development creates a situation where we
have a tripartite type arrangement. You have the developer putting in pit and
pipe and you have a fibre operator coming in subsequent to that. What we
typically provide to developments is a turnkey solution. We deploy the fibre
and the pit and pipe altogether to the developer. We believe that having a
situation where it is pit and pipe only is not necessarily the best outcome
overall
We would support that type of amendment to the legislation.[18]
The Minister’s authority to determine a scale of payments
would provide an equitable and efficient market outcome. The principal factor
the Minister would take into account would be NBN Co’s own average cost of
installing a fibre connection. The Minister would also be empowered to have
regard to:
- The typical costs of installing fibre networks (including
significant regional variations in costs);
- A reasonable return to developers for undertaking installations.
This approach would also allow for fibre infrastructure
specifications to be made according to agreed standards whether they are NBN Co
or industry standards endorsed by the Communications Alliance, without any
resulting cost pressure on developers, providing positive competition outcomes.
Second Proposed Coalition Amendment
To further address the damaging effects on competition in
the market for the provision of new fibre infrastructure, another amendment to
this Bill is required. This amendment would add additional provisions to Parts
7 and 8 of the Telecommunications Act, to exempt from the operations of those
Parts any fibre network which met the following conditions:
- The network is not owned or operated by NBN Co or Telstra
- The network was installed in a new development (defined as one in
which persons had first taken up residence after the commencement date of the
Bill) under a contract between the network’s owner and the developer
- The network was owned and operated by the same entity which built
it
- The network delivered retail services only to persons who resided
in (or operated businesses in) the development.
This amendment would have the effect of preserving
competition in the market for the provision of new fibre infrastructure. It
would be open to CGOs to install and operate new fibre networks in new developments,
without needing to meet the requirements of Parts 7 and 8 of the
Telecommunications Act, which are tailored to be appropriate to the very
different and much larger scale business to be operated by NBN Co.
The CGOs would continue to be subject to the other access
requirements which apply under the telecommunications specific provisions of
the Competition and Consumer Act. That is, other retail service providers
wishing to serve residents of a development would have the legal right to
obtain access over the CGO’s network.
The effect of this amendment, together with the first
Coalition amendment, would be to maximise the options available to developers
and CGOs. They could contract on the basis that the CGO would build the
network, and operate it until such time as it was sold to NBN Co; or they could
contract on the basis that the CGO would continue to operate it and there would
be no sale to NBN Co.
Coalition Members believe that providing maximum flexibility
would best facilitate the working of the market, and in turn would produce the
best outcomes for developers, CGOs – and most importantly, end users, both of
the housing provided by the developer and the broadband services to be
delivered over the network.
We note the statement made by the Minister for Broadband,
Communications and the Digital Economy on 9 December 2010:
It has been a consistent feature of the Government’s policy
in new developments that there should be room for competing providers. This
continues to be the case. Developers will be able to source fibre from
competing fibre providers if they wish. Providers can compete to provide
infrastructure in new developments, for example, by offering more tailored
solutions to developers or more expeditious delivery.[19]
In the Coalition Members’ view, if the Minister is serious
about this statement, he should readily agree to the amendment we propose.
Conclusion
Coalition Members will be moving the amendments referred to
above when the bill is debated in the Parliament.
Hon
Malcolm Turnbull MP
Member
for Wentworth
on behalf of the Coalition Members of the Joint Committee on
the National Broadband Network