| Conroy's finest hour or depth of despair as NBN decision looms |
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| by Stan Beer | |
| Wednesday, 11 March 2009 | |
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Page 1 of 2
There
is a growing feeling that the coming week could well shape up to be one
of the most significant turning points in Australian telecommunications
history. The Federal Government, represented by Communications Minister
Stephen Conroy, has a monumental decision to make and an equally
monumental problem on its hands.Featured Whitepaper
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Under the present telecommunications regime, the only organisation with the necessary capital, resources and infrastructure to build a FTTN network that will reach 98% of Australia's population is Telstra. And of course Telstra is not in the race. The Government knows this, Telstra knows this, the public knows this and even the NBN bidders know this. Whoever is named the winner or co-winners of the NBN tender have not got a ghost of a chance of building a FTTN network without the cooperation of Telstra in some shape or form. Looking at the bidders - Axia, Acacia, Optus, TransACT or the Tasmanian Government - none has access to the necessary risk capital to chance its arm against Telstra, not even with the promised $4.7 billion Government backing. It's not just a matter of raising the extra $10 billion cash. Building the NBN will require access to Telstra's copper - something Telstra will fight. It will require Telstra not to build a competing service - something Telstra will almost certainly try to do. It will require the backing of capital prepared to risk huge sums against a powerful incumbent which already has much of the needed infrastructure, human resources, expertise and capital in place. CONTINUED Page 2 |
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