Chapter 6 Economic development and diversification
6.1
This chapter will look at the role and potential of the NBN for all
businesses, but especially small and home-based businesses. In this context,
the Committee will also consider the effects of the NBN in rural and regional
Australia, especially in terms of economic development. The chapter will
discuss the varied evidence on how the NBN will improve business efficiency,
extend opportunities for the information technology industry and increase
business revenue. The chapter then considers specific impacts in rural and
regional Australia, including in terms of economic diversification, tourism, and
agriculture, and benefits for sustainable regional development.
Improving business efficiency
6.2
The Committee heard about ways in which the NBN presents opportunities
for businesses to make improvements and efficiencies. These include the use of
video-conferencing, tele-working, cloud computing, and voice-over-internet-protocol
(VOIP), all considered below.
Video-conferencing
6.3
The Committee heard from inquiry participants that the provision of high
definition video-conferencing has the potential to revolutionise the way
business is conducted, while, at the same time, significantly reducing costs
for businesses. Video-conferencing was also discussed in Chapter 2 in relation
to the provision of government services.
6.4
Video-conferencing was identified by both big and small business as an
innovation that provided significant cost savings. A reduction in the need to
travel, and the ability to demonstrate products and services to a client,
rather than just tell them over the telephone or via an e-mail, opens up many
new possibilities for the conduct of business both domestically and internationally.
Many businesses were already able to clearly identify cost savings, whether
through the provision of training online, reducing overheads for the training
organisation, or through reducing the costs of transport and accommodation for
sales-based companies.
6.5
Mr Tony De Liseo, President of ICT Illawarra, stated that video-conferencing
would enable more efficient training of staff than conducting face-to-face
training. Further, he noted that some companies were foregoing staff training
due to the prohibitive costs:
We now make up 30 per cent of our non-project billable hours
in training. If the user experience is slow, we are being forced to deliver it
face-to-face. That is just not possible. We do not have enough trainers and the
cost of face-to-face training is very expensive. It is one thing for the
university to talk about the fact that they specialise in face-to-face
training, but, really, they are one trainer training classrooms of people. We
often have to provide one trainer to one student. It is a huge expense, so
companies are foregoing training. If they are foregoing training, the
productivity of their staff is dropping.[1]
6.6
Mr De Liseo also reported to the Committee on the cost savings
associated with providing training via video-conferencing, rather than face-to-face,
stating there was an 80 per cent cost difference, 60 per cent of which was
based on fees, with the remainder made up of other costs, such as time off work
for travel.[2]
6.7
Cost savings through video-conferencing were also identified by Mr Darren
Alexander, President of TASICT, who currently travelled overseas extensively
for business purposes:
When you are small, you cannot grow because you need more
work, so you physically have to travel all the time. I reckon I will save $100 000
alone just in video-conferencing when I will be able to do that. I do not mean
$6 million video-conferencing; I mean high-definition, real video-conferencing
that will allow me to interact with our customers and deliver services.[3]
6.8
Video-conferencing was also identified as a way of building customer
relations, especially when dealing with foreign markets.[4]
Mr Allen Bolaffi, Deputy Chair of the Southern Adelaide Economic Development
Board, agreed that the full potential of video-conferencing had not been fully
explored, suggesting it could be extended across services and industries as yet
untouched by it.[5] The Department of
Innovation, Industry, Science and Research (DIISR) noted that ‘improvements to
communications through tools like video streaming will allow greater
opportunities for networking and professional collaboration.’[6]
6.9
As mentioned in Chapter 2, tele-presence is an advanced form of
video-conferencing that uses ‘high definition, high frame rate, low latency,
immersive video conferencing facilities’ to simulate being in the same room as
the person or group at the other end of the link.[7]
Mr John Lindsay, General Manager of Regulatory and Corporate Affairs at
Internode, told the Committee that his company uses tele-presence ‘between all
its capital city offices’, saving it ‘hundreds of thousands of dollars a year’
in airfares and accommodation.[8] Mr Lindsay told the
Committee that tele-presence is a ‘completely different way of working’, but
noted:
… using tele-presence requires bandwidth that approaches 50
megabits. Today, that is affordable in a corporate setting but it is not really
affordable in a domestic setting. The NBN will enable that.[9]
Tele-working
6.10
While tele-working has been discussed in other chapters of this report
in terms of social and environmental aspects, consideration here is given to
the potential for savings and efficiencies in business, improving workplace
participation and supporting regional development.
6.11
DIISR informed the Committee of a report on tele-working that found 24
per cent of small and medium sized businesses had used tele-work, with 82 per
cent reporting a positive impact, 17 per cent a neutral impact, and less than one
percent a negative impact on their business from tele-work.[10]
6.12
The Committee heard from inquiry participants about the benefits to
business from tele-working, hearing evidence that it will lead to increased
productivity as employees are able to choose, to some extent, their hours of
work.[11] The Committee also heard
companies that offer the opportunity to tele-work have recruitment advantages,
as employers are able to access skills available in other cities or even
countries. It also gives organisations the opportunity to retain employees who
may have to leave the area of the place of business for personal reasons.[12]
6.13
The ACT Government told the Committee that tele-working ‘allows
expertise to be used where it is needed regardless of the location of the
worker’, reducing the costs of office accommodation for employers and reducing
time and travel costs for workers.[13]
6.14
Rising Sun Pictures identified affordable broadband as a way of not only
reducing costs but also increasing the pool of quality workers available to the
company:
We have pockets of artists all around Australia and, rather
than sticking them on aeroplanes and flying them here, we could be either
working with them as individuals or working with them in small clusters of two,
three or four people and having located them in that area.[14]
6.15
The North Queensland Small Business Development Centre reported that
they had a remote staff member based in Perth, and that another employee
planned to retire to Brisbane, but would remain a part time employee working
with remote access to the company’s server.[15] This allowed the
organisation to retain skills while also ensuring employee satisfaction.
6.16
Mr Peter O’Rourke of Shellharbour City Council suggested the growth of
tele-work via the NBN would change behaviours, removing the need for some
employees to commute. Mr O’Rourke compared the likely growth of businesses and
employment around the NBN’s infrastructure to that which happens when a
significant freight-carrying road is built:
If you look at the M7, it carved its way through Western
Sydney and it is a road. So what. But when you look at all the economic
development that happened and the capacity and the ease with which businesses
can relocate, there is another tick, another advantage of that sort of
infrastructure. You look at the sustainability being improved because petrol is
saved and trip times are saved and all sorts of things. I think at the local
community level the NBN is going to have a similar influence in terms of
shifting the whole culture in ways that we may not have yet anticipated.[16]
6.17
Mr John Grant of the Information Technology Industry Innovation Council
(ITIIC) also identified the flexibility offered by tele-working, noting it was
a choice about where someone worked, as well as to some extent being about when
someone worked. Drawing on the experience of his own business, he explained
that in addition to infrastructure, cultural change is needed to support
tele-working, to change the mindset from one where ‘work is a place I go’ to
‘work is a thing I do’:
People talk about a blurred line between the personal and
work, but there is no line at all. In fact it has all merged now because it can
do, and it has done …[17]
6.18
Mr De Liseo of ICT Illawarra indicated that tele-work would not
completely remove the need for face-to-face contact in the conduct of business,
as it was not possible for employees in all roles to work remotely. Mr De Liseo
explained various instances where tele-work arrangements were successfully
used, including where senior staff could work on projects using client computer
systems ‘during their down time, without cutting into their production time’. Mr
De Liseo also noted that this had impacts for travelling time to and from the
office, which is ‘a lot safer for them and for us.’[18]
6.19
He also discussed the workplace participation benefits of tele-work with
regard to the return to the workforce of new mothers:
Over 50 per cent of our workforce are women, and a lot of
them do not want to do those late hours in our office. That is one of the
additional benefits of working from home. A lot of the women who work for us—
three of our professionals—have recently had babies and they have been able to
use that [flexible work arrangements].[19]
6.20
Mr Paul Nicholls of Curtin University agreed that the possibility of
being able to tele-work would be a positive outcome for women, reducing the
shortage of women in the workforce, and assisting in the retention of women in
the workforce.[20]
6.21
Mr Fry of Ballarat ICT Ltd indicated that the future of tele-work would
also include employees working as they commuted, requiring a quality
broadband connection to service railway networks. He suggested an optical fibre
connection would enable the rapid transfer of documents, improving the capacity
of employees to work while they commuted.[21]
6.22
The Committee acknowledges the significant benefits that can be brought
to a region’s economic development by tele-working arrangements. These benefits
are further considered later in this chapter, but the Committee notes evidence
regarding some impacts of reduced commuting. Mr Pulford, representing the City
of Ballarat, noted that while ‘we very strongly aspire to have a regional
economy not become a dormitory city’, approximately 3000 people commute daily by
train or car to Melbourne, and that many of those people also worked from home
as part of their employment arrangements.[22] It was also noted that
tele-work opportunities provided through the NBN would address some
infrastructure pressures currently being experienced in Ballarat, namely car
parking and commercial office space.[23]
6.23
Mr De Liseo advised the Committee that there were approximately 400 to
500 people working in the IT industry who commuted daily to Sydney from the
Illawarra, and that there was no real reason they could not perform that work
back in the Illawarra.[24] This reduction in the
need to use modes of transport also eases traffic congestion and creates
environmental benefits through reduced carbon emissions, as was discussed in
Chapter 5.
Box 6.1 A practical example of tele-working
The Committee heard from Mr Chris Hancock, CEO of AARNet and a selfdescribed
‘tree-changer’. As described in Chapters 4 and 7, AARNet is a large
national organisation that provides broadband services to universities and
other educational institutions.
Mr Hancock currently lives in Armidale, New South Wales, and only travels
to Sydney weekly for face-to-face meeting. This is made possible by the use of
high-definition video-conferencing equipment allowing multiple participants.
He reported participating in ‘at least four to six video-conferences a day’.
He commented that in order for tele-work via video-conferencing to become
viable ‘end-to-end throughput is really important. It is not only symmetrical—
we cannot have any latency or any delay.’ This is the type of broadband
service that will become widely available with the NBN.
Source: Mr Chris Hancock, Committee Hansard, Canberra, 27 May 2011, pp. 29-30. |
Cloud computing
6.24
As discussed in Chapter 2 in the context of government services, cloud
computing is the provision of consumer and business products, services and
solutions delivered in real time over the internet. ICT Illawarra noted that
the nature of computing was changing, and that ‘real work’ was being done on
the internet now, rather than on computer hard drives, and that there had been
an increase in people wanting to connect and run business applications via the
internet, rather than over small, closed networks.[25]
6.25
As noted in Appendix E, cloud computing stores information in servers
and provides that information as an ‘on demand’ service. Under cloud computing
consumers can access all of their documents and data from any device with
internet access such as a home or work PC or a mobile phone or other mobile
internet enabled device.[26]
6.26
Computer Associates described cloud computing as the ‘undisputed’ future
direction for the IT industry, and commercial and government entities, noting
it will provide organisations with the ability to more effectively utilise
their IT infrastructure and to consume IT as a utility, paying for only what is
used on a monthly basis, delivering clear benefits for users.[27]
6.27
Computer Associates noted that latency in internet connections can have
a ‘severe’ impact on complex cloud services, even rendering applications
‘inoperable’. It suggested the rollout of the NBN will assist in addressing
this problem and will facilitate access to overseas service delivery, with the
added benefit of providing a ‘sustainable competitive advantage’ for Australian
cloud computing service providers.[28]
6.28
George Fong, Executive Director of Lateral Plains Pty Ltd, noted that
while the concept of cloud computing may be considered new, his business had
been assisting other businesses with multiple premises with similar solutions
for a considerable period of time.[29] However, the NBN would
present more of these opportunities and make it easier for business owners to
pursue cloud solutions. Mr Fong also noted that there was a growth in these
sorts of business opportunities with the growth of broadband internet services.[30]
6.29
Mr Alexander of TASICT reported on the productivity and cost benefits of
cloud computing for small and home-based businesses:
… a lot of these businesses are family oriented and they are working
from home, so they are currently using what they have now. If you look at cloud
computing you see what benefits that would have for the SME [small and medium
enterprise] market. Instead of going to buy all this hardware and all this
software and actually using it, having to update it and regularly use it, they
will be able to have a one-monthly fee service that they can run. Cloud already
exists now but part of the problem is that Tasmania does not have the backhaul,
so we do not have the infrastructure that allows us to do that in the
high-capacity area.[31]
6.30
Mr Grant of the ITIIC also noted the financial shift offered by cloud
computing:
In simple terms, cloud is about converting capex [capital
expenditure] to opex [operating expenditure]; there is no doubt that the cloud
service delivery model will allow that to occur.[32]
6.31
Smartnet identified good quality, high speed broadband as an enabler for
small and medium enterprises (SMEs) to access cloud computing and to grow their
businesses in markets outside of their immediate suburbs, accessing skills,
products and customers, as well as support and investment to increase their
productivity and competitiveness. It noted that SMEs who take advantage of
these opportunities are enabled to:
… grow without many of the physical constraints with which
they presently must grapple. This fundamentally underpins our ability to be
more productive and competitive globally—which, of course in turn, directly
impacts the quality and prosperity of communities and individuals.[33]
6.32
During a site inspection at Google Australia’s headquarters in Sydney,
the Committee was given the opportunity to use new Google products called
‘Chromebooks’, which consist of a basic notebook computer with an internet
browser installed. Using only the internet browser backed up by a reliable,
high speed broadband service, a full range of standard desktop computing
applications could be run and documents shared via the ‘cloud’, including email
and calendar functions, word processing, spreadsheets and instant messaging.
6.33
Cloud computing also offers a radically different way for small and
medium businesses to conduct themselves, and offers excellent opportunities to
find cost savings. Rather than spending heavily on capital expenditure, the
ability to use a wide range of services but only to pay for what is used offers
significant savings for businesses.
VOIP
6.34
Voice Over Internet Protocol (VOIP) was identified by many witnesses and
submitters as a method of providing cost effective telephony to small business,
reducing reliance on the traditional telephone system, and greatly reducing
costs for small businesses, especially those that sought to do business
overseas. Ms Pip Forrester of the McLaren Vale Grape, Wine and Tourism
Association noted the advantages of VOIP to small and home-based businesses:
… lots of people say the new world is working from home,
working remotely. They want to be able to work from home and access the
internet from home. It is really important to secure VOIP. Some of them use it
now but it is not very secure. Many of them that get this see this as a really
incredibly good way to save a lot of money. A lot of them do a lot of international
work, international phone calls, but also phone calls to these remote sites.
They are all on the phone constantly. So they see VOIP as being one of the
really big advantages.[34]
6.35
Mr Alexander of TASICT also identified VOIP as beneficial for small
business, noting that it would be possible for a small business in Tasmania to
communicate from points in Hobart and Launceston for free, using VOIP
technology, rather than having to pay for it through traditional telephony.[35]
6.36
Mr Mark Frost, Director of On Q Communications, reported that VOIP would
provide cost savings for small and medium businesses, while also increasing
flexibility.[36]
6.37
At a site inspection of the Telstra Experience Centre in Sydney, Telstra
demonstrated to the Committee a range of practical VOIP services being made
available to small businesses through its Digital Business packages.
6.38
The Committee agrees that the use of VOIP can offer significant savings
for business at a very low initial cost. Being able to communicate over an
internet connection removes the need for a company to pay for a copper line
rental as well as for internet access. A drastic reduction in telephony
expenses is also extremely valuable to businesses in rural and regional areas,
and businesses that do extensive business with overseas clients.
Supporting business growth
6.39
The Committee heard from witnesses and submitters that the capacity to
increase business revenues would be provided by the NBN, particularly by
improving business access to export markets, by enabling more effective
operation of home-based business, and by being able to take advantage of
Australia’s time zone in the operation of transnational businesses.
Opportunities for high technology industries
6.40
Many sectors of the Australian economy are now dependent on the transfer
of large volumes of information from one point to another in the conduct of
their everyday business. Even the manufacturing sector is now heavily reliant
on being able to access a network that can handle large amounts of data. The
Committee heard of opportunities which may exist for smaller companies in these
data-intensive fields to become rapidly competitive with larger firms and
foreign competitors, for a comparatively low outlay for business.
6.41
The ITIIC noted that the NBN would support the local IT industry by
enabling it develop applications that exploit the availability of high speed
broadband:
… there is a considerable opportunity for the local IT
Industry in developing software applications that exploit the availability of
high speed broadband. Traditionally we have been great users but not producers
of ICT, and the NBN provides the opportunity to shift this balance.[37]
6.42
Mr Adrian Young, Director or Sales at NearMap Pty Ltd, suggested that
with the support of the NBN, users of his company’s high resolution mapping
product would be able to take advantage of its open source programming to
develop a wide range of innovative applications:
In terms of how our customers would use our product in an NBN
environment, we see huge applications … We have an API [Application Programming
Interface] which is open, which means developers can build all kinds of
applications using our content and, in an NBN environment, that amplifies that
substantially. Customers will be able to leverage our imagery in very powerful
ways to build their business … it will turbocharge the application of our
product to innovation, to new product development and to research. So it is a
serious shot in the arm in terms of how our customers would use our product. It
is certainly a very nice fit with what we do.[38]
6.43
The Committee heard several examples of how high technology industries
have to date relied on slow and inefficient means of transferring information.
Mr De Liseo stated that it had taken approximately eight hours for him to
transfer a file from Wollongong to Brisbane, and that through the course of a
project, that data transfer would occur multiple times, meaning days of lost
productivity, and that it was still faster to physically transport a file:
It is 2011 and the bandwidth of a 737 is still better than I
can get to my home. This is where we are and that is what is limiting us.[39]
6.44
The ITIIC noted that the improved network capacity of the NBN will
benefit Australian companies by enabling them access to software on demand. For
example, the submission notes that modelling and simulation industries, such as
computer aided design and engineering, depend on applications that often have
‘heavy graphical input and output bandwidth requirements’, meaning they are
currently limited to localised and difficult to access facilities. The high
bandwidth capacity of the NBN will greatly lower the cost of access to these
applications, enabling small companies in these industries to ‘compete with the
larger companies in provision of services to a much wider customer population’.[40]
6.45
The ITIIC identified the Australian video game industry as a potential
growth area,[41] reporting that it
currently exports almost 100 per cent of its product, working with partners in
the US, Europe and Asia, and that the NBN would improve these collaborative
opportunities. Further, the Council reported that the delivery of video games
to consumers had changed greatly recently, with the focus moving away from the
physical medium of a DVD to full online downloads.[42]
The provision of the NBN would enable Australian developers to improve the
speed in which they were able to deliver their products to their clients.
6.46
Mr Brian Hales, Economic Development Advisor at the City of Onkaparinga,
noted that while the manufacturing sector is increasingly ‘fragmenting’ and
being outsourced overseas, design and prototyping are key elements where
Australia can maintain its industry locally. He noted that local design would
require ‘big broadband capacity to send it interstate or internationally’.[43]
6.47
This was supported by Mr Geoff McQueen, board member of Regional
Development Australia (RDA) Illawarra, who noted that design companies in the
Illawarra region were constrained in their ability to transfer large files compared
to other parts of Australia:
Some of the examples I am familiar with are things like
engineering design outfits that are doing work from here, generating income and
employing people here. Their customers are all over the place—in the Pilbara,
in Queensland and internationally. They are having to ship a lot of big files
around and they are having to do a lot of design work. They are constrained in
a way that they would not be if they were in Surry Hills, Randwick or any other
places of Sydney, or Melbourne, the Gold Coast, Brisbane, Geelong, Newcastle,
Perth or Adelaide, that happen to have coaxial cable running past them already
that can do speeds in excess of 100 [Mbit/s].[44]
6.48
Mr Alexander of TASICT, who operates a design company that specialises
in colour marketing solutions for the paint and building products manufacturing
industry, identified the NBN as enabling small to medium businesses to become
more competitive in larger markets, as well as accessing international markets.[45]
He also noted the ability to transfer files over broadband has already greatly
lowered his company’s costs, as it no longer relies on air freight to transfer
files on discs. However, he said the rate of file transfer over DSL ‘is still
slow’, and the benefits of providing faster broadband infrastructure would be
considerable:
It is simple: time equals money. Small business operators
understand that. It does not matter if they have a webpage, they are sending a
catalogue or interactive video or they are showing their bed and breakfast in
some small town; the access to data and allowing people to see it is going to
allow those businesses to understand where the benefits are.[46]
6.49
DIISR told the Committee about the export potential of Australian IT
skills, noting that the NBN would provide an opportunity for Australian IT
professionals to more easily connect to the global software and applications
market.[47]
6.50
The Committee was informed that there were particular opportunities for
small business in local website hosting. Mr Bret Treasure, Member of the
Australian Web Industry Association (AWIA), told the Committee that most
hosting of Australian websites is currently done overseas. He said that the NBN
would give the Australian IT industry the opportunity to offer faster hosting
locally:
Then for the first time people could say, ‘Here is an
advantage—here is in a reason to host in Australia: you will actually get a
faster loading time to website then you would get otherwise’. That has direct
benefits not only in the users getting better experience but also in the fact
that there are search-engine advantages in having that faster load time—Google
rewards you for having fast load times; Google also rewards you for being
hosted locally; if you have a .com.au and you are hosted locally, then that is
going to help you in the rankings as well—so there are some side benefits to
that.[48]
6.51
Mr Treasure also suggested that if some large cloud hosting services
were operated in Australia, it would lead to lower bandwidth costs for
Australian businesses:
When you look at something like Twitter photos they are
hosted on S3 by Amazon overseas, so if they had a bank here—and obviously they
will make a commercial decision about whether they will do that—then we would
not need to use the bandwidth to download those photos every time we look at a
photo on Twitter.[49]
6.52
Local hosting was also discussed by Mr Adrian Young of NearMap, who
advised that his company was looking to scale its business internationally, and
was approaching the point of having to decide whether his company wished to
host and serve all its bandwidth-intensive content in Australia or overseas. Mr
Young suggested that the competitiveness of the price of access to
high-bandwidth connections under the NBN would be critical to this decision.[50]
6.53
Mr Alexander of TASICT also noted the potential of locating servers in
Australia (and indeed, Tasmania) as being a way of reducing costs and improving
efficiency in his business:
… we currently have four servers that had to be set up in
four different parts of the world. We cannot do it here in Tasmania, because we
do not have the capability. We have four servers set up and we access and
control them here but, if the NBN comes in, and I can have a data centre set up
here, there is no reason I cannot do it all over Tasmania.[51]
6.54
The Committee sees the ability for Australian businesses to access
affordable hosting onshore as a benefit of the NBN. It has the potential to
increase speeds, improve the visibility of Australian businesses through search
engines and also support a new sector of the IT industry in Australia. The
Committee recognises that at present, it can be more cost effective for an
Australian business to move their hosting offshore. The rollout of the NBN is
likely to lead to growth in local hosting; sufficient speeds will become
available to make an Australian hosting industry viable.
Home-based businesses
6.55
DIISR described the home-based business sector in its submission as
being ‘diverse and complex’. It told the Committee about its own research which
has found that home-based businesses vary greatly ‘from building trades through
to ICT consultancies’, and the majority use a computer and internet as part of
their operations. It also noted:
The research indicates a correlation between growth in
business outcomes and ICT use. ICT is seen as important in this context as it
allows these businesses to increase the scale of virtual operations without the
costs associated with growth in physical operations.[52]
6.56
The Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) estimated that in June 2004,
there were around 1 040 000 home-based business operators in Australia,
representing 67.5 per cent of all small businesses. This proportion had
increased from 58.3 per cent of businesses in February 1997.[53]
6.57
The Committee heard from several witnesses that obtaining comprehensive
and up to date information on the number of home-based businesses was
difficult, because many home-based business operators prefer to ‘fly under the
radar’.[54] For example, Ms Rhonda
Hardy of Eastern Metropolitan Regional Council in Perth told the Committee:
A lot of them do not want to put their hands up … and tell
the local council and everyone that they are operating a local business for
fear that suddenly they will have to put in extra toilets, disabled bays and
this and that and refit their whole house to run their services … We probably
only know about 20 or 25 per cent of what our home businesses are up to in this
country.[55]
6.58
However, some witnesses were able to provide useful approximations on
the number and proportion of home-based businesses in their local areas. For
example:
- Mr De Liseo of ICT
Illawarra said that more than half of the people he deals with in the ICT field
had started as home-based businesses.[56]
- Mr John McGee of the
Tasmanian Department of Tourism, Economic Development and the Arts noted that
of the 38 000 businesses in Tasmania, around 22 000 are sole traders,
suggesting a high proportion are home-based.[57]
- Mr Bob Carmichael,
Manager of Business and Economic Development at the City of Tea Tree Gully,
informed the Committee that using conservative methods of approximation, 4125
of the 6000 businesses in his local government area are home-based. This
equates to one business operating in every nine households, although Mr
Carmichael noted that anecdotally the figure was closer to one in every seven households.[58]
- Mr Steven Harrison,
Director of Business and Economic Development at the City of Prospect, said
that Council research had found that around two in every three businesses advertising
in their area are home-based.[59]
6.59
Mr Harrison went on to discuss the very wide variety of types of
businesses being run from homes in his area:
A lot of builders, carpenters, electricians, plumbers,
engineers and architects, people who need high bandwidth. One of the most
surprising businesses down one of our side streets works for the UN and runs UN
events on a global scale. She was in desperate need of optical fibre. She has
paid to put her own optical fibre in since we found her. It was a real mixed
bunch. They were very small businesses, one person: consultants, marketing
communications people …[60]
6.60
Mr Hales of the City of Onkaparinga in South Australia identified
home-based businesses as a way of driving employment growth in the local
economy. He described high-speed broadband as being a ‘substantial attracter
for employment’ and suggested that the City of Onkaparinga would begin to
heavily promote home-based business in areas connected to NBN fibre in the future.[61]
6.61
Mr Grant of the ITIIC noted that some small and home-based businesses
had been developed exclusively over the web, and many of these were run by
young people with no traditional understanding of business practices, leading
to innovative behaviours:
There are a lot of creative people … they are all young
people and they are doing things differently. They do not have the legacy of
bricks and mortar real estate … they are trained in the digital economy. That
is where they operate. That is what tomorrow is, too, so we have to be part of
that. We have to be decisively part of that.[62]
6.62
The North Queensland Small Business Development Centre (see Box 6.2
below) reported that some of the smaller businesses they had supported were using
their connectivity to expand their businesses further afield. Mr Brian Arnold,
the Centre’s Chief Executive Officer, told the Committee about a local second
hand clothing business that, before setting up a retail outlet at the Centre, had
started at home using Facebook. It is now seeking to expand its franchise to
other regional areas by selling second hand clothes through its website.[63]
6.63
At the inquiry’s Wollongong hearing, RDA Illawarra told the Committee
that home-based businesses in the region suffered because of a lower level of connectivity
impacting on their competitiveness with other cities.[64]
The Committee heard that an acceptable level of ADSL service was not possible
in many suburbs in the area due to the distances from the nearest exchange.[65]
The RDA expressed optimism, however, that the rollout of the NBN would put
these businesses ‘on a level playing field’ with their competitors.[66]
6.64
While it is difficult to quantify the exact size of the home-business
sector, the evidence suggests it accounts for a growing majority of businesses
operating in Australia. By making high speed broadband available to all
premises in Australia, including fibre connections to 93 per cent of them, the
Committee expects that the NBN will bring significant gains for this sector.
Home-based businesses, located in all parts of the country, will be able to
leverage NBN connections to up-size their operations and access new customers
without facing the high overhead costs involved in setting up traditional
‘bricks and mortar’ outlets.
Box 6.2 North Queensland Small Business Development Centre
The North Queensland Small Business Development Centre was established
to provide support to small businesses in the area around Townsville. It is
located in a light industrial area and provides an NBN-level connection to all
of its 35 tenants. It identifies its role as helping small businesses to make a soft
transition from home-based to commercial premises.
The Townsville Home Business Group is also based in the centre—a group
that aims to assist home-based businesses. The majority of the home-based
businesses are operated by women, or ‘mumpreneurs’. The majority of
businesses are also web-based.
The Centre regards the NBN as key to the ability of small and home-based
regional businesses to continue to grow. This includes networking, enhancing
the customer base and establishing franchises in other regions.
Source: Mr Brian Arnold, Committee Hansard, Townsville, 19 April 2011. |
Australia’s geographic advantage
6.65
The Committee heard that Australia’s geographical position and time zone
hold some advantages in the provision of services for the foreign market, with
Australia open for business while people in other parts of the world sleep.
6.66
At a public hearing in Perth, Ms Valerie Maxville told the Committee
that Western Australia is nicely positioned between Europe and the United
States to enable multi-national companies to continue their operations around
the clock:
Some of the companies put their studios eight hours apart
around the world. So anything that is not closed gets passed onto the next
group, and they can have a 24 hour turnaround on developments.[67]
6.67
Mr Tony Clark, Director and Co-founder of the Adelaide-based visual
effects company, Rising Sun Pictures (refer to Box Study 6.3), explained that
his firm uses its cineSync online collaboration tool, underpinned by a
private fibre broadband network, to take advantage of Australia’s time zone while
working on motion pictures:
This is what our clients do and they tell us repeatedly: they
come in the morning and there is the delivery of all the things they have
wanted from yesterday’s review session sitting on their desktop waiting for
them. They open those little movies, they give them to their editorial
department, they show them to the director, they spend the whole day milling
around talking about what people think about that work. At the end of the day,
we wake up, go to the office, have a little sit down chat by video conference
or typically just audio conference and cineSync session with our customers. We
take their notes, which we turn around while they are in bed, they wake up the
next day and the whole cycle continues. You will find that the time zone offset
instead of being your enemy is actually your friend and is what is enabling you
to service your customers better than you could if they were down the street
from you.[68]
6.68
Mr Clark also informed the Committee that similar collaborations across
time zones are taking place in the medical field. The example he gave is that
there is radiography that is being analysed in Australia as ‘night shift’ work
for the United States.[69]
6.69
Mr Brett Biddington, a member of the Space Industry Innovation Council,
told the Committee that Australia has strategic advantages from being
‘essentially equidistant around the globe from the United States and Europe’
and also being in the Southern Hemisphere (unlike the major space-industry
nations), making it ideally placed for hosting satellite ground stations to
support services requiring ‘24/7 coverage’.[70]
6.70
The Committee notes with interest that Australia’s geographic position can
be turned from a negative into a positive by high speed broadband. As the above
examples indicate, there are a wide range of fields in which Australian
companies could take advantage of time zone offsets to provide potentially
lucrative services to much larger markets in Europe and the United States. The
Committee recognises that these services all require the ability to quickly
transmit large amounts of data, and the NBN will enable this type of
connectivity to become available to many more businesses that it is currently.
Box 6.3 Rising Sun Pictures
Rising Sun Pictures is a film and television visual effects company based in
Adelaide that works principally on Hollywood feature films. When the
company began operations with just four staff, they were required to courier
work on tapes to the United States, which took approximately four days. The
client would then review the tape and call Rising Sun to talk through any
changes.
Facilitated by the availability of fast broadband (funded by the South
Australian Government), Rising Sun developed ‘cineSync’, an award winning
collaboration technology. CineSync allows Rising Sun and its remote clients to
look at a shared visual context and point at items on the screen, enabling the
users to collaborate effectively. CineSync has been used films such as Avatar
and the Harry Potter series, and has helped the movie industry to grow
outside of the United States.
Rising Sun now employs 140 staff and sends hundreds of gigabytes of data
over fast broadband every day.
Source: Mr Tony Clark, Committee Hansard, Adelaide, 4 April 2011. |
NBN impacts for regional development
6.71
The Committee received more than 75 submissions from Regional
Development Australia committees (RDAs), rural and regional councils, and other
rural and regional groups, constituting almost a third of submissions made to
the Committee. These submissions were overwhelmingly supportive of the rollout
of the NBN, identifying it as a transformative piece of infrastructure that
would go some way to ameliorating the tyranny of distance that has long been a
problem for rural and regional communities.
6.72
Many of the potential impacts of the NBN discussed in other chapters
(for example, in the health, education, and government services sectors) will
extend positive benefits to rural and regional areas. This chapter focuses on
the NBN’s capacity to support economic growth and employment in those places.
The Committee heard about the ways in which economic development in regions and
better business outcomes could be mutually reinforced.
6.73
While specific outcomes and benefits of the NBN for particular sectors,
such as health and education, have been discussed earlier in this report, it
should be noted that evidence also outlined other positive consequences that could
be felt in rural communities following the availability of NBN applications in
those sectors. For example, medical treatment may require a patient to travel
to a major regional city, or a capital city. Mr O’Halloran, of the Wheatbelt
East Regional Organisation of Councils, explained that those people are often
accompanied by members of their immediate families, which means that their home
towns forego the economic benefit of that family shopping locally.[71]
The availability of rehabilitation treatment and support via NBN applications may
enable these people to not only return home more quickly, and recover from
illness with appropriate support, but ensure that their home town doesn’t
suffer the ongoing economic consequences of their absence.
6.74
These positive consequences can also be observed in education sector. One
of the primary benefits to education identified for rural and regional
Australia was the ability to provide remote training for employees, negating
the need to spend time and money to send employees to major centres to receive
further vocational training. Mr Shenal Basnayake, Economic Development Officer
at the Cassowary Coast Regional Council, noted the ability to provide in-house
training would act as a great enabler for local businesses while also making
productivity gains.[72]
6.75
The Committee notes the concerns raised by many inquiry participants
about declining youth populations in regional and remote communities, and the
social and economic impacts felt across several sectors, including agriculture.
As discussed in Chapter 3 on Education, by improving access to educational
options, the NBN could help retain young people in rural and regional areas.
The Committee recognises that this could lead to significant economic benefits
for these areas.
6.76
Elsewhere in the report, some consideration is given to evidence
received by the Committee as to the positive benefits the NBN will bring to the
Australian tourism sector. In this chapter, the focus will be on the impact of
those improvements which may be experienced from the perspectives of rural and
regional communities. Similarly, the impacts of some NBN applications in the
agriculture sector are discussed in Chapter 5, as part of the consideration
about environmental benefits of improved sensoring and monitoring; the focus in
this chapter will extend to the benefits anticipated for the economic sustainability
and development of Australia’s agricultural communities and productive
industries.
6.77
Across all of these areas, the Committee heard many views from inquiry
participants as to the role of governments; greater consideration to these
aspects are concentrated in chapter 10.
Constraints on business by current service
6.78
Mr Geoff McQueen of RDA Illawarra expressed enthusiasm about what local
businesses were achieving through use of information technology and the
internet. He noted however that some local organisations were starting to feel
constrained in what they could do due to the lack of bandwidth through existing
internet connections, and were unable to spend significantly more on higher
capacity services.[73]
6.79
The Committee received extensive evidence noting that current services
to rural and regional areas were inadequate for the needs of end users. It
heard that some Australians in rural areas are still using dial up internet
services, and even travelling to another location to access faster internet
services.[74] Extensive evidence of
blackspots was also provided to the Committee, including areas very close to
major population centres. These inadequate services also extended to basic
access to telephony, with the Committee hearing of inadequate landline
telephone access, and poor quality mobile phone access.[75]
6.80
The Committee was also informed by inquiry contributors that the
services they currently accessed were expensive compared to those available to
consumers in cities and urban centres.
6.81
AgForce Queensland identified distance as the cause of high costs and
poor services to regional and remote Australia, noting that gaps would exist in
the availability of ‘normal’ broadband through ADSL until the NBN was
completed, as there was not existing infrastructure to support universal
broadband in regional areas.[76] Mr Robert Walker, Chief
Executive Officer of AgForce Queensland, noted that his organisation still used
postal services and facsimiles to send documents to some members due to a
complete lack of internet access, or a lack of education in how to access these
services.[77]
6.82
The Committee heard that even in a large, regional centre, there were
still blackspots in the coverage currently provided, and that an initial
inquiry made by business owners who were considering relocation to Ballarat
regarded the level of data access which could be expected.[78]
6.83
Access to cheaper, better quality services at prices competitive to
those offered in metropolitan areas was identified by several witnesses as an
attractive element of the NBN for regional areas. For example, Mr Alexander of
TASICT remarked:
This is the first time that these centres will have
investment that allows for business growth and provides an opportunity for
younger people to stay in these regional centres. Effectively, the NBN technology
will breathe life back into regional centres and allow them to operate more on
par with the metropolitan areas.[79]
6.84
The Committee heard evidence that suggested the NBN would have
significant impacts on rural and regional businesses, either through providing
those businesses with the infrastructure required to be more competitive with
businesses in major cities or overseas, or by enabling businesses to relocate
to regional centres due to reduced overheads.
Regional service hubs
6.85
The City of Ballarat identified itself as a services hub for the region,
and explained that broadband provided through the NBN would constitute an
essential part of the city’s plan to fulfil this role.[80]
6.86
However, the City of Ballarat also noted that while it saw itself as the
hub for economic activity, it also sought to preserve economic activity elsewhere
in the region:
We are trying to avoid the absorption of economic activity
from the region into Ballarat. We understand that in Ballarat we need to
provide a foundation level of services and economic activity to support the
region, but we very much support maintaining and developing industry sectors
and businesses more broadly within the region. We see that there are strengths
right across the region in different parts of the region that support various
businesses. The feedback that was provided to the regional planning committee,
which developed the strategic regional plan through community symposiums, was
about the ability of businesses to remain based in small rural towns and nice
businesses to be able to be developed out of homes, or vineyards, or whatever
those activities are through the use of broadband and very fast internet.[81]
6.87
Mr Pulford, of the City of Ballarat, identified strong development of
the ICT sector as vital to the growth of the region in more traditional sectors,
such as manufacturing:
Through the Federal Government there is about to be a centre
for manufacturing excellence built in Ballarat. That says that manufacturing is
critical for Ballarat’s economy. The connection that we want to make for the
purposes of today’s discussion is around ICT as an enabler for manufacturing
and the commercialization or opening up of the intellectual property
universities. The council is currently engaged in a very detailed process with
the universities and the manufacturing sector using ICT as a key enabler. It is
one of those opportunities, where, for us, while ICT is probably the seventh
largest sector of our economy, it is fundamental to what actually makes our
economy strong and vibrant.[82]
6.88
The City of Geraldton-Greenough saw itself as a similar hub for regional
Western Australia. Mr Tony Brun, the city’s Chief Executive Officer, explained
that in the NBN’s network architecture Geraldton would effectively become ‘the
exchange for the whole of WA’. He noted this would bring opportunities for the
city to exploit both in ICT and as a logistics, service and data centre for the
resources sector.[83]
Attracting and growing businesses
6.89
The Committee received a range of evidence that the NBN could play a key
role in attracting businesses to set up new operations in regional centres,
leading to positive employment outcomes for those communities. For example, the
Eastern Regional Corridor submission stated that:
The NBN will also reduce the impact of geographical
inequalities on economic productivity and growth and enable the region to
become a viable location for existing firms from outside the area to establish
operations. This is already happening slowly as business owners and staff opt
for a better quality of life away from capital city congestion.[84]
6.90
AgForce Queensland noted that the NBN would provide significant cost
savings to rural and regional businesses by making communication faster and
cheaper, resulting in increased revenue which could be used to grow businesses
and to grow regional economies. It would also enable companies to expand and
still remain in their local community, or to attract established companies to
rural and regional areas.[85]
6.91
Kiama Municipal Council advised the Committee that there were
restrictions on large businesses operating within the local government area,
but that the Council’s economic plan aimed to attract high-end professionals
seeking to relocate from Sydney. Mr Christopher Quigley, the Council’s Director
of Strategic and Commercial Services, suggested that the NBN would enable the Council
to attract architects, graphic designers and other workers in similar fields to
operate small businesses in the region.[86]
6.92
The Committee heard that regional areas often used their lifestyle
benefits as a way to attract professionals who are able to use technology to
continue to work away from big cities.[87] Attracting these
professionals with infrastructure such as the NBN has the potential to increase
employment in regional areas as businesses grow.
6.93
Mr Paul Lange, Member of the Australian Council for Private Education
and Training (ACPET), told the Committee that he chooses to run his online
training organisation from Cairns due to the lifestyle there. However, three
quarters of the company’s 60 staff work remotely from locations ‘all over
Australia’ by using broadband connections with VOIP and video links. Mr Lange
noted that despite being in a regional location, this enables the company to
employ ‘quality people’ who would not necessarily be available in the immediate
area.[88]
6.94
Mr Clark told the Committee that Rising Sun Pictures had benefited
greatly from Cinenet, a state government-funded private fibre network for the
major businesses in his sector. He indicated that had this technology not been
available to support and grow the business, it would have had to have relocated
to the United States.[89]
6.95
The Committee expects that as the NBN continues to be rolled out, more
and more businesses will take advantage of the flexibility to base themselves
in the locations of their choice while remaining highly competitive in markets
both locally and overseas. The Committee was interested to hear that since the
NBN has been deployed in the small town of Scottsdale in rural Tasmania, at
least two businesses have already moved there from interstate specifically to
take advantage of its fast broadband connectivity.[90]
Economic diversification
6.96
Diversification of local economies was often emphasised by contributors
to the inquiry from rural and regional areas, who, while proud of their local traditional
industries, had sought to expand into different areas and saw the potential of
the NBN as an enabling tool for diversification.[91]
The Committee heard that this could help regional economies become more
sustainable.[92]
6.97
The comparative advantage of regional and rural communities was also
emphasised, with one witness noting that lower costs and a higher quality of
life could act as drivers to attract industries away from metropolitan areas
and increase rural and regional populations in communities that would otherwise
be dependent on ‘monoculture’ traditional industries.[93]
6.98
The National Farmers’ Federation (NFF) noted the opportunity the NBN
provided to build and diversify regional economies while encouraging the
decentralisation of businesses and services, suggesting there should be a
strong focus on encouraging development and diversification of regional
economies during the rollout of the NBN.[94] The New South Wales
Farmers’ Federation noted:
The ability to earn off-farm income through online businesses
is very important to our Members. Diversification of income is a common goal of
many farm businesses, and the NBN will provide the much needed opportunity to
run online businesses in nearly any industry.[95]
6.99
The Committee was informed by witnesses and submitters that the rollout
of the NBN had the potential to provide jobs in rural and regional communities,
and to give young people the opportunity to access on-the-job training and
experience in skills that would be transferable to other areas, addressing some
of Australia’s skills shortages.[96] Shellharbour City
Council noted the job generation that had occurred at the trial site in
neighbouring Kiama.[97]
6.100
Wollongong City Council agreed, identifying the NBN as presenting
excellent job opportunities, especially for the young people of the area. The
council noted the decline of the coal and steel industries in the Illawarra had
lead to higher than average unemployment, and reduced employment opportunities
for young people. The council reported that there had been attempts to
diversify the economic base of Wollongong and the Illawarra, especially in the
tertiary education and financial sectors, and that the NBN would enable these
sectors to continue to grow, and compete on an equal footing with competitors
based nationally and internationally.[98]
6.101
It was also noted by witnesses that the opportunities provided by the
NBN enabled smaller businesses in regional areas to promote themselves and to
connect more easily with their communities.[99]
Exporting to other markets
6.102
The Committee heard that there were significant constraints on rural and
regional businesses being able to access foreign export markets due to
insufficient internet services in these areas, and that the NBN would perform a
transformative role in this area. Mr Basnayake of the Cassowary Coast Regional
Council, noting that his region has the largest amount of tropical fruits grown
in Australia, described the situation of one grower who had sought to engage in
foreign markets:
How do we enable him to export? He has to have a web
presence. He has to be engaged with foreign markets. He has to be able to have
real-time access to information to respond to inquiries and things like that.
The NBN will provide such a benefit not just to him but to all the businesses.[100]
6.103
Mr Basnayake continued:
It is about enabling them to export. It is giving them access
to real-time information. You could access the stock exchanges, the markets,
and see price fluctuations in what the dollar is doing. Things like that are
important for these businesses. Reading the newspaper or reading the Financial
Review the next day is not going to help you if you had to deal with
something the day before. Having access to that information, being able to
connect, is what I am talking about, and getting your product out there.[101]
6.104
RDA Townsville and North West Queensland also identified the potential
for engaging in export markets that would be opened up by the NBN. They
reported an expectation of rapid growth in the region due to the mining
industry and food export production demands. Further, it was noted that the
arable parts of the region were very close to ports, enabling rapid harvest and
transportation.[102]
6.105
Mr Paul Nicholls of Curtin University noted the capacity of the NBN to
enable regional businesses to access larger markets in other cities or
overseas, suggesting a $5 million business in Western Australia could become a
$50 million business if it had access to foreign markets via technology such as
the NBN.[103]
6.106
The Committee was informed of innovations in the wine industry, with a
wine-maker in McLaren Vale using video-conferencing technology to conduct ‘virtual
wine tastings’. The winemaker and potential buyers overseas would taste a
package of wines together and discuss them remotely, strengthening ties between
the winemaker and his customer and reducing the need to travel. However, connectivity
was currently constraining the success of this innovation; images and sound
were not transmitting smoothly.[104]
6.107
Mr Alexander of TASICT told the Committee that his own business exports
around 50 per cent of its products all over the world, from its base in
Launceston. Mr Alexander explained that because his work all uses rich media,
he currently spends a very large amount of time and money travelling, and
estimates he will save $100 000 a year on travel expenses if he is instead able
to use high-quality video-conferencing to engage with his export clients.[105]
Supporting tourism
6.108
The Department of Resources, Energy and Tourism (RET) submitted that
tourism contributes $34 billion Australia’s economy, employs more than 500 500
people, and comprises 93 per cent micro to small sized businesses. It noted
that 46 cents in every dollar tourism expenditure is spent in regional areas.[106]
6.109
The Committee notes that, as part of a National Long Term Tourism
Strategy, a Digital Distribution Working Group has been set up to ‘encourage
more small and medium tourism enterprises to accelerate online distribution of
their tourism product, improve online presence and capability’. Currently,
although 85 per cent of tourism operators have a website, only 35 per cent have
online booking and payment facilities.[107] RET advised that the
NBN will ‘enable businesses to develop data rich websites, showing video and
high-resolution images of products and services as well as allowing access to
increasingly sophisticated applications’.[108]
6.110
The National Tourism Alliance informed the Committee that at a time when
the tourism industry is undergoing a period of transformation, access to high
speed broadband internet is becoming more ‘critical to the future success of
the tourism sector’ as customers increasingly use the internet for tourism
research, bookings and payments. The NTA noted that:
The NBN provides opportunities for tourism businesses to
distribute their products online more effectively, through high quality websites,
and thereby compete and conduct business on a global scale in new markets,
particularly from Australian regional and remote areas who may not have had a
cost-effective online opportunity in the past.[109]
6.111
Mr Basnayake of Cassowary Coast Regional Council noted that having
effective broadband services was of particular importance to the tourism
industry, which represents a significant part of the regional economy. The
region contains backpacker hostels which provide accommodation for workers in
the banana plantations. He reported that there was clearly a lack of broadband availability
in the area, as evidenced by the popularity of wireless internet connections at
fast food restaurants and libraries.[110]
6.112
The Committee heard that tourists have come to expect the provision of
internet services, as they have become reliant on e-mail and social networking
sites to maintain a connection with home while they travel. For example, Mr
Andrew Connor, Spokesperson for Digital Tasmania, observed:
Some people want to get away from it all, but some people
still want to stay connected to everything. They want to upload their holiday
videos and pictures to their friends so they can see them instantly.[111]
6.113
Mr Basnayake noted that while some tourism operators around Mission
Beach had an excellent web presence, the smaller tourism operators and caravan
parks did not, and suffered as a result. He noted that those smaller businesses
relied heavily upon ‘drive tourism’ and were unable to access markets beyond
that because of an inadequate web presence. Mr Basnayake described the ‘chicken
and egg situation’ where slow internet speeds meant a lack of ICT expertise in
the area which meant that businesses were not easily able to access assistance
to design and establish a better web presence.[112]
6.114
The McLaren Vale Grape, Wine and Tourism Association informed the
Committee that the tourism sector in its region was acutely aware of their
dependence on the internet. The vast majority of tourism operators were small
businesses operating bed and breakfasts that handled more than 90 per cent of
their bookings online, and expected increased occupancy rates once they were
able to harness the potential of the NBN to grow and promote their businesses.[113]
6.115
The Eastern Metropolitan Regional Council in Western Australia also told
the Committee of its aspirations to increase tourism to the area by promoting
the area as a haven for natural and conventional health treatments, and that
there was a desire to implement a system in which tourists could book customisable
packages online, but that this would require adequate ICT support and
infrastructure to enable adequate collaboration.[114]
6.116
The Committee was interested to hear the ways in which the web was being
used to promote the tourism sector in Ballarat. More than half of the tourism
sector in Ballarat is based around home-based tourism services, mostly bed and
breakfast providers. The City of Ballarat advised that they had worked with the
local tourism sector and had invested more than $1 million in developing, for
the first time, an integrated booking system for bed and breakfast providers
around Ballarat, ‘which sounds minimal’, but which has resulted in a
substantial improvement in the marketing of the city:
… We now have an integrated place for people to go. It has
also meant that for businesses their booking systems are running much more
seamlessly than they might have otherwise.[115]
Supporting agriculture
6.117
Agriculture is clearly another particularly important industry to many
rural areas. As noted earlier, Chapter 5 of this report discussed a number of
innovative agricultural applications of the NBN in the context of using sensors
to monitor infrastructure and the environment. This section will explore some
broader agricultural applications.
6.118
The Australian Information Industry Association (AIIA) submitted that
broadband access can stimulate new employment and improve the sustainability
and profitability of traditional industries like agriculture:
For a country such as Australia with a deep export history in
agriculture and resource extraction, access to high speed broadband through the
NBN has the potential to both open new business and investment opportunities as
well as build on our traditional strengths.[116]
6.119
The NSW Farmers’ Association informed the Committee of the importance of
broadband-related technologies for enabling more efficient farm operations:
Popular uses by farming businesses include weather
forecasting, purchasing equipment online, trading commodities, determining soil
moisture and calculating efficient fertiliser content. The ability to email
from the paddock, turn off irrigation remotely and monitor farms through
satellite imagery has increased the profits and productivity of those able to
access it.[117]
6.120
AgForce Queensland informed the Committee that there had been a
significant increase in the average age of primary producers in Queensland,
especially in the dairy industry. It noted that young people were leaving rural
and regional Queensland due to a lack of educational opportunities, and a lack
of drivers to retain young people in their communities, and noted that this was
clearly due to a lack of technology.[118]
6.121
AgForce Queensland told the Committee that farmers could use broadband
both to manage their operations and to access better information, such as
weather reports and market information. AgForce particularly emphasised in its
submission the ways in which access to this information would lead to more environmentally
sustainable farm practices, ‘as well as a system to network and manage on‐farm technology which
is used in everyday operation.’[119]
6.122
Mr Walker also reported that industry was driving technological changes
in farming, and that Australia was leading the way in many of the technologies
being used.[120] This was supported by
the National Farmers’ Federation, who agreed that agricultural industries had a
significant engagement with research and development, and that the NBN may
offer opportunities for innovation not previously considered.[121]
6.123
The Cassowary Coast Regional Council noted the provision of quality
video streaming services would enable agencies such as the Australian
Quarantine and Inspection Service, Customs, and the Department of Primary
Industries to assess products remotely.[122]
Committee conclusions
6.124
It is clear to the Committee that some businesses have outgrown the
traditional internet infrastructure available in Australia, and are seeking to
incorporate more efficient methods of conducting operations, including by using
technologies which are supported by an effective and reliable broadband
network. The Committee heard that in order to successfully use applications
such as video-conferencing and VOIP, to access cloud computing and tele-working
arrangements, and to make the most of the advantages offered by Australia’s
time zone, Australian home-based businesses and other small and medium
enterprises will require the NBN.
6.125
The Committee accepts the views of inquiry participants about the possibilities
offered through tele-working arrangements, particularly with regard to
improving productivity and access to skilled workers. From a regional
perspective, the ability to tele-work also presents rural and regional
Australia with a competitive advantage against bigger population centres. Rural
and regional Australia can offer a completely different quality of life when
compared to cities, but the lack of employment opportunities has long made
choosing to move to a rural or regional location a difficult decision for
people who live in cities because of their employment circumstances. The
Committee considers that the NBN affords the possibility of regional economic
diversification, allowing towns to attract smaller businesses which may then
expand locally, providing more traditional employment to locals.
6.126
The Committee was also interested to hear of the benefits provided by
the NBN to small rural and regional businesses seeking to expand and even
compete overseas. It was noted by many inquiry participants that rural and
regional economies were often heavily dependent on one or two specific
industries, and that these economies were often placed under significant strain
due to natural disasters. However, the NBN would provide rural and regional
small business with the opportunity to broaden their customer bases and to grow
their businesses, provide further employment, and to support regional economies
sustainably.
6.127
The Committee was interested to hear the role technology can and is
playing in the tourism and agricultural sectors, and the particular impacts in
these industries in rural and regional Australia. The Committee heard concrete
examples of the role the NBN could play in supporting small businesses across
Australia, and encourages other councils and regional groups to examine the
innovations of councils in their support of local tourism. For the agricultural
industry, there are also significant benefits arising from the provision of
ubiquitous high speed broadband. Electronic telemetry and real time market
information provide farmers with opportunities to greatly improve productivity
and competitiveness, and benefits of the NBN through, for example, the
education sector, may assist small communities to retain their younger
populations, thereby also assisting in the economic development and sustenance
of those places.
6.128
The Committee notes that the speeds provided by the NBN will vary,
depending on whether a user is connected to fibre, wireless, or a satellite
service, and notes the desire from many rural and regional Australians to be
connected to the fibre network. The issues around this are discussed in
Chapters 9 and 11.