Telco report of little value - InternetNZ
Telco report of little value - InternetNZ
Media
Release
23 February 2009
InternetNZ (Internet New
Zealand Inc) finds little to commend about the
incumbent
telcos’ report “Getting the Most from High Speed
Broadband in
New Zealand: Investing in Productivity
Growth” but is not surprised
telcos are fighting the
Government’s fibre rollout plan.
The document, while
dated December last year, was not released to the
public
until today. InternetNZ Executive Director Keith Davidson
says
its key pitfall is the lack of vision in
re-iterating tired arguments
about whether New Zealand
needs fibre or not. Both National and Labour,
in
pre-election pledges, elevated the debate from “whether or
not we
need fibre to the home” to “how do we get
fibre to the home”, and it
seems this report is
seeking to take a backward step to the expectations
of
New Zealanders and the Government.
This report also fails
to take into account the information – including
detailed costing information – provided in the
December release of the
InternetNZ-commissioned
“Broadband Strategy Options for New Zealand”
report
from consultancy Network Strategies.
“It is predictable
that incumbent operators would put the interests of
their shareholders first in the debate about fibre.
Their vested
interests should be front of mind when
policymakers are considering this
report,” says
Davidson.
“The independent Network Strategies report
shows that incumbent telcos,
particularly Telecom, are
under threat from power utilities, which can
roll out a
fibre-to-the-home network for $2 billion less than the
telcos, and at a public cost close to the $1.5 billion
that the National
Government campaigned on,” says
Davidson.
The report talks about supporting the Government
but in effect attacks
the Government’s position. John
Key stated in campaigning that
“National's
fibre-to-the-home goals are an essential part of our vision
for a step change in New Zealand. We believe that ultra
high-speed
broadband, as afforded by fibre-to-the-home,
can deliver dividends for
New Zealanders in all walks of
life.”
InternetNZ agrees with Government’s vision and
does not accept that
existing bandwidth is sufficient.
“The Government has fully understood
that you cannot
be talking about productivity without talking about
unconstrained broadband.”
“A fibre rollout is
clearly a nation-building exercise, and as such
requires
significant investment by the Government. The incumbents
need
to focus on how they can work with Government to
help deliver on the
vision, rather than trying to stand
in the way,” concludes Davidson.
Network Strategies Report: http://bit.ly/yNkdA
ENDS