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NBN will not happen but structural separation will says Gen-i boss
VIRTUALISATION
NBN will not happen but structural separation will says Gen-i boss | NBN will not happen but structural separation will says Gen-i boss |
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| by Stan Beer | |
| Wednesday, 11 March 2009 | |
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Page 1 of 2
The departure of Sol Trujillo from Telstra will pave the way for
structural separation of the carrier and the NBN is dead in the water
says the Australian boss of Telecom NZ's giant services subsidiary
Gen-i. What's more, regulation will continue to play a big role in the
newly separated Telstra.Featured Whitepaper
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"It is very similar to the situation we had in New Zealand when (former Telecom NZ CEO) Theresa Gattung was butting heads with the Government," Varney told iTWire. "After Theresa left that paved the way for the inevitable structural separation that happened under the new CEO Paul Reynolds. "Now that Sol Trujillo is leaving, a similar vacuum will be created at Telstra which could well end up with the new CEO leading Telstra toward structural separation." Of course this is not the first time that Varney has spoken about forcing Telstra to structurally separate its wholesale and retail businesses. Earlier this year, he called for the forced separation of the wholesale and retail businesses of both Telstra and Optus to give smaller players like Gen-i a chance to compete. However, Varney does speak from a position of experience. He was a vice president at BT during its period of structural separation, before joining the Telecom NZ fold and being on board during the structural separation of retail businesses like Gen-i. "We are functionally separated. Gen-i is a standalone retail business. We're going through that process now; the accounting processes are all maturing and what an exercise that's been," says Varney. "It's been a long time coming and it's obviously been a testing time for the business. However, it's making good progress and Paul Reynolds has got a lot of experience of these sorts of environments working at BT in the UK. It's working well." CONTINUED Page 2 |
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