on
29-11-2013
09:12 PM
- last edited on
30-11-2013
11:05 AM
by
underbat
I guess that is why Turnbull is refusing to relese 'the blue book advice' regarding the plan that should have been available via freedom of information...
The Coalition’s national broadband network model will prove inadequate for many businesses, is poorly planned and is unlikely to be completed on time, according to NBN Co’s internal analysis for the incoming Abbott government.
Obtained by Fairfax Media, the analysis casts doubts over the timing and cost-effectiveness of the government’s proposed fibre-to-the-node model, highlighting numerous legislative, construction and technical challenges likely to blow out the Coalition’s 2016 and 2019 delivery deadlines.
Dr Ziggy Switkowski, executive chairman of NBN Co, during Budget Estimates at Parliament House. Photo: Alex Ellinghausen
The draft document also slashes revenue projections important for the project’s commercial viability by up to 30 per cent by 2021.
Under the Coalition policy, fibre optic cables would be installed to nodes, or street cabinets. From there, existing copper wires would complete the connection to homes and businesses.
Communications Minister Malcolm Turnbull promised this would give households broadband that was “fast, affordable, sooner” than Labor’s fibre-to-the-home model.
On Friday, Mr Turnbull dismissed the document during an interview with Channel Nine.
"This document is a) out of date, b) it is defending a failed project. It has no credibility, absolutely none," he said.
"The truth is, that we will know what is actually going on the NBN very soon, because there is a big strategic review underway at the moment ...It's a very objective study."
The advice prepared as part of the material contained in the “blue book” – to brief the incoming government – suggests the Coalition’s model faces a plethora of technical and legislative obstacles and is unlikely to be completed by 2016.
Mr Turnbull had promised to deliver 25 megabits per second (Mbps) broadband services to all homes by then, and to upgrade 90 per cent of premises to 50Mbps by 2019.
“There are a number of conditions that will impact on NBN Co’s ability to undertake a volume [fibre-to-the-node] network rollout,” the report warns. “Given the complexity of these conditions, it is unlikely that NBN Co will meet the 2016 deadline to upgrade the fixed network to enable Australians to have minimum download speeds of 25Mbps.”
NBN Co’s technical advice says completion of the second stage of the rollout by 2019 ‘‘could be achievable’’ but could slide past 2019 if there was not significant progress on 12 issues soon.
The conditions include “significant” remediation of Telstra’s copper network, council planning and approval for the installation of what independent assessments suggest will be about 60,000 street cabinets, the need to recruit and retrain a large workforce on fibre-to-the-node technology, the introduction of complementary legislation and competition watchdog approval.
Most of these issues need to be resolved before large-scale rollout can begin, the document says.
The analysis also:
The revelations in the document came to light on Thursday as a Senate committee heard that officials expected the government to make less money from the NBN under the Coalition model because it would offer slower speeds and users were likely to download and upload less data than otherwise would be expected, and because it would face competition from companies offering other technologies.
Proposed by Labor before the 2010 election, the $37.4 billion NBN has come under fire from opponents for its expense and for missing rollout targets.
It is the subject of four reviews ordered by the Coalition, including a 60-day strategic review due next week. Mr Turnbull has said he wants those results before deciding how to proceed with the rollout of his $29.5 billion model.
Since the election, the new minister has sacked all but two members of the previous NBN Co board, and installed the former Telstra chief executive Ziggy Switkowski as executive chairman and three other telecommunications veterans as non-executive directors. Three former Telstra executives have joined the ranks of NBN Co.
NBN Co executives, including Mr Switkowski, have been ordered to appear before at a Senate committee on the NBN on Friday.
on 29-11-2013 09:15 PM
I was speaking to my Son about this, this afternoon, he said the Coalitions broadband is outdated already, he works in IT.
on 30-11-2013 09:49 AM
ziggy talks up FTTP https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jHo3Eo7Bo2o
on 30-11-2013 09:55 AM
Conroy showed that video in senate estimates the shoe is on the other foot now, turnbull comes up looking like a liar or an idiot take your pick. conroy trounced the fools .
on 30-11-2013 11:57 AM
30-11-2013 05:06 PM - edited 30-11-2013 05:07 PM
Current copper wiring held together with plastic bags senate committee told.........good enough for the Liberal party.
I was told that this patching was being done about two years ago when I got some tesltra contractors see why my speeds were so slow.........telstra would not spend money because they were expecting a complete rip out and isntall with fibre optic.
I guess those who crowdfunded money to try and force NBN to node knows what is outside their house and under the road, while Turnbull knows nothing.
The union representing Telstra field staff estimates up to 80% of the telco's "disgraceful" copper-wire network pits have been patched together by plastic bags or ring-barked cables.
It's the very same copper network NBN Co plans to buy or lease from Telstra for the fibre-to-the-node national broadband network (NBN) being championed by the Abbott government.
"This would be a fraud on the Australian taxpayer," CEPU NSW assistant secretary Shane Murphy told a Senate hearing on the NBN in Canberra on Thursday.
Murphy said 75-80% of Telstra's copper pits were as rotten as the pictures he brought to the Senate committee, which showed the ageing network being crudely held together by ring-barked cables and covered by plastic bags in a vain attempt to keep water out.
"This is the exact network that will be sitting outside there, tying into the NBN that is built to the node," he said.
Murphy said the network was in reasonably good condition when Telstra was privatised in the late 1990s.
However, proper maintenance of the network's copper pits had since disappeared.
"Telstra has been consistently pushing workers to simply get the customer services up and running, Band-aiding the network, and moving the employee or contractor quickly onto the next job," he said.
Telstra would have no idea just how bad things were in the copper pits, Murphy added.
"Workers and contractors are now so frustrated with what they're working in, and without being given the adequate responsibility to be able to fix it appropriately, they're not reporting them."
Murphy said the communications union was about to begin a campaign in a number of electoral seats around the country to highlight the issue.
Earlier on Thursday, the Senate select committee summonsed NBN chief Ziggy Switkowski to appear before a parliamentary inquiry.
Switkowski and other senior NBN executives said they were reluctant to appear before the committee in person.
The committee has issued a summons requiring their presence at an inquiry hearing in Canberra on Friday.
Kate Lundy, who chairs the committee, said on Thursday the summons had been issued with regret, given the government's public commitment to openness and transparency in matters relating to the NBN.
The Senate has asked the committee to inquire into the government's reviews of the NBN and the governance of NBN Co
on 30-11-2013 06:50 PM
PDF transcript of Ziggy being dissected by senate committee http://parlinfo.aph.gov.au/parlInfo/download/committees/commsen/f08a172f-9ef4-4503-8105-5af86d4927fc...
on 30-11-2013 06:55 PM
The Senate Select Committee has been questioning departmental representatives about changes to NBN Co's revenue projections.
The Government is yet to release a Strategic Review of the change in policy from Labor's fibre to the premises (FttP) to the Coalition's fibre to the node (FttN) plan.
Former Labor communications minister Stephen Conroy led the questioning of federal officials.
He asked the deputy secretary of the Communications Department, Ian Robinson, whether increased competition could lead to a revenue decrease for NBN Co.
Mr Robinson confirmed he expects there will be increased competition under the Coalition's plan, and said the "competition will have a revenue impact".
The communications union was also questioned at the hearing, with an official urging politicians to go out and open up Telstra pits in their electorates to see the state of the copper network.
Shane Murphy from the communications union showed a string of photos to illustrate his assessment that more than 75 per cent of the copper network is in poor condition.
He told Senator Conroy that the Government should be under no illusions about the state of the network.
"To consider using taxpayers money now would be a fraud to buy it back, and I intend campaigning on it," he said.
The Coalition did not nominate any senators to sit on the committee in time, meaning the Government has not been represented during today's hearing.
on 30-11-2013 07:21 PM
Bahahah and in the US they are fuming over the Bama care health website not launching glitch free.....
Imagine if their countries nwteork upgrade was as half a**ed as this.
I bet Conroy was enjoying his questioning, shame the guy does not know how the World Wide Web works.
on 30-11-2013 07:29 PM
Yes Freddie.......a Telstra tech said same to me over 2 years ago. He rolled his eyes skyward and stated that even if the new NBN sytem were in place right now (he said this back in 2010) that it would be unable to cope and an outdated system.