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freitasm

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#81936 20-Apr-2011 09:18
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Just received


The government has successfully completed contract negotiations with Telecom and Vodafone for the Rural Broadband Initiative (RBI), which will deliver on the government’s plan for vastly improved and affordable broadband services for rural New Zealand.

The agreement has been reached after two months of negotiations.

The Minister for Communications and Information Technology, Steven Joyce, says this is a significant milestone in a journey towards New Zealand being a better connected and digitally enabled, productive and growing economy.

“Not only have we secured an agreement that exceeds the government’s RBI objectives, but we will have 252,000 customers in rural New Zealand getting access to high speed broadband that compares well to urban levels of service and prices.

“I am confident that we have secured the best deal for creating a step change in broadband services for rural New Zealand.”

Last November Telecom and Vodafone submitted a joint proposal to the government’s $285 million tender for the provision of broadband services in rural New Zealand. 

The final contracts with Telecom and Vodafone provide for:
• 86 per cent of rural houses and businesses having access to broadband peak speeds of at least 5Mbps (compared with 20 per cent of rural homes and businesses at present; the RBI objective was 80 per cent)
• the construction of 154 new cell phone towers and the upgrading of 380 existing cell towers to enable fixed wireless broadband to rural customers, as well as improved mobile coverage
• Telecom extending their existing fibre network by approximately 3,100 kilometres, with some homes on route being provided with the opportunity of fibre to the premise at urban prices
• an additional 6,200 square kilometres of mobile coverage across New Zealand (making a total of 125,700 square kilometres)
• 700 rural schools connecting directly to fibre networks, and 48 schools having digital microwave radio connections – this equates to 95 per cent of rural schools having access to ultra-fast broadband speeds of 100Mbps (the RBI objective was 93 per cent)
• wholesale prices comparable to urban pricing
• all competitors to Telecom and Vodafone being able to access rural broadband infrastructure funded by the government on a non-discriminatory basis
• Telecom extending urban-like fixed-line broadband speeds to 57 per cent of rural customers
• an upgrade path to 4G.

Mr Joyce says the Rural Broadband Initiative (RBI) is a high priority infrastructure project for the government.

“It has been important to ensure we achieve the best value we can for rural communities and taxpayers, while having the confidence that the providers selected can deploy a resilient network that at the same time allows for competitive products to be provided to rural customers.”

As part of finalising the contracts, Telecom applied for a revision of their operational separation undertakings. These were consulted on recently.

”Concerns about the clarity of Telecom’s proposed variation were raised by submitters.  On that basis, I will be making a counter proposal with minor changes to Telecom to clarify the intent of the variation, which I expect to be responded to quickly,” says Mr Joyce.

“The revised undertakings will ensure that operational separation is upheld while enabling Telecom to offer RBI prices for services provided over government subsidised RBI infrastructure.”

Telecom and Vodafone are expected to begin the roll out of RBI infrastructure mid-year. It will be completed over the next six years.


 






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codyc1515
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  #460818 20-Apr-2011 09:44
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I was initially very weary of this whole "project", but it actually sounds pretty good from what I just read.



DjShadow
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  #460837 20-Apr-2011 10:08
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I'm guessing we will see an improvement to State Highway mobile coverage as a result also?

Beccara
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  #460847 20-Apr-2011 10:20
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"Peak" Is a word thats never been thrown around when talking about RBI, Interesting




Most problems are the result of previous solutions...

All comment's I make are my own personal opinion and do not in any way, shape or form reflect the views of current or former employers unless specifically stated 



Ragnor
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  #460861 20-Apr-2011 10:41
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They normally say "up to" which is probably the meaning of the usage of the word peak in that context.

Have the new changes solved this issue?

One of the points made by Telecom is that while all new RBI fibre would be available to all comers as dark fibre, existing Telecom fibre would be restricted to "layer 2" wholesale services. Telecom says that their older fibre may not have enough cores for other users, may not have break-out pits in the right place, and really was only ever intended for use by Telecom.

Access to inexpensive dark fibre in rural New Zealand is a huge issue for alternative telecommunications providers. Rural areas are not large enough to support natural competition. The requirement for an alternative provider to purchase wholesale L2 services from an incumbent is enough to keep them out - either due to slow/no service provision or predatory pricing.

Source: http://nztelco.com/content/?p=156

In the above site look at the image/map diagram and consider what it means that anywhere there is a blue line only there is only layer 2 wholesale from Telecom available not dark fibre and not open access.

cyril7
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  #460898 20-Apr-2011 12:30
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What I find interesting about the school aspect is that currently most schools are on a Education plan (School Zone), this means its a special DSL plan, 0.5Mb/s up and down uncapped, even though most schools like the urban one I was at yesterday are on this plan they had a ISAM cabinet at their front gate, modem syncing at 19.8Mb/s throughput throttled to 0.5Mb/s, doh!

So with this initiative most Rural schools will be getting 200x the performance of most current urban schools.

Cyril

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  #460936 20-Apr-2011 13:53
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Is there a map or address lookup tool to discover if you will come under the RBI or UBI initiatives?




Generally known online as OpenMedia, now working for Red Hat APAC as a Technology Evangelist and Portfolio Architect. Still playing with MythTV and digital media on the side.


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