Telecom media release – for immediate use
4 August 2014
It’s time for a ‘Giganation’ says Telecom as UFB coverage hits 100%
Telecom, soon to be Spark New Zealand, says the time has come for Gigabit per second data download speeds to be
available across all of New Zealand’s Ultra Fast Broadband (UFB) fibre network.
Telecom made the call today as its Ultra Fibre products became available in the Taupo area – making it the only Internet
Service Provider (ISP) selling fibre broadband services everywhere in New Zealand where the UFB network is currently
active.
“When the UFB network rollout began in 2012, the standard download speeds available were 30 or 100 Megabits per second
(Mbps),” says Telecom’s General Manager Product and Service Delivery, Lindsay Cowley.
“Since then, we’ve seen encouraging product innovation and speed increases across the four fibre companies who are
contracted by the Government to build the UFB network and offer wholesale services to ISPs. Telecom has worked
constructively with all LFCs to bring fibre products to people around New Zealand.
“A top download speed of 1000 Megabits, or 1 Gigabit, per second - the maximum technically possible under the UFB
network’s current configuration - is now on the table as Ultrafast Fibre Ltd has announced it will launch the product
throughout their coverage area of approximately 162,000 addresses in the central North Island.
“With consumers increasingly embracing the benefits of fibre and thirsting for more data at higher speeds, we think the
time is right to have a consistent 1 Gigabit per second offering across all fibre companies and the entire UFB network,”
Mr Cowley says.
“The recent launch of our Unlimited plans has given Telecom customers the opportunity to become ‘Giganaires’ in terms of
the broadband data they use. We reckon it’s time for New Zealand to become a ‘Giganation’ in terms of broadband speeds
and for the ultra fast broadband network to truly live up to its name.”
Telecom and other competing ISPs purchase wholesale internet access from one of the four fibre companies which each have
a monopoly over a geographic area. The ISPs then sell fibre services to home and business customers.
As well as Gigabit speeds, Telecom is calling for more national consistency on the products offered by the fibre
companies to avoid a “fibre tangle”.
“We applaud the LFCs for their innovation and increasing the fibre speeds we can offer to customers. However it’s
getting to the stage where there are too many different inputs across different parts of the country, which makes
marketing nationally consistent fibre services to our customers more difficult,” says Mr Cowley.
“On current trends, we run the risk that our fibre services will be available at different speeds, and different prices,
depending on where you live in the country. The more complex it becomes, the greater the risk that customers will put
the transition to fibre in the ‘too hard’ basket and stick to their old copper broadband – which would be a bad outcome
for our customers and for New Zealand overall. We need to make sure the transition to fibre is as straightforward and
uncomplicated as possible.”
Telecom has written to all four fibre companies outlining its preferred range of inputs ranging from the 30 Mbps
download, 10 Mbps upload (the current standard entry-level UFB input) to 1 Gbps download, 500 Mbps upload that should be
available nationally.
ENDS
Note to editors: In terms of the different residential wholesale input products –
• Chorus and Enable offer a residential 100 Megabit per second download/100 Megabit per second upload input (although
there is a price difference in input price), yet it is not available from UFF and Northpower
• A 50/20 input is available in all areas, except Chorus where it is not available
• A 100/100 input is available in Chorus and Enable areas, although there is a difference in input prices
• UFF offers a 1000/20 input, but it is not available to the 85 percent of New Zealanders who can get UFB but are not in
the UFF area
• Chorus will offer a 1000/500 input to the winner of the Gigatown competition, but it will not be available anywhere
else