Conroy reveals freefall in fibre-to-the-home costs

Dec 10, 2009 11:44 AM
Tags: conroy | fttp | economies | fibre | greenfields | rollouts

Economies of scale on future broadband deployment possible.

Communications Minister Stephen Conroy has revealed a bidding war that occurred between builders in a Melbourne greenfields estate over the cost of connecting new homes to an Opticomm fibre network.

Senator Conroy told journalists at the Realising our Broadband Future forum in Sydney that a builder in the Alamanda Estate at Point Cook “almost went out of business” after trying to charge home owners $3000 to connect their homes to the fibre.

He claimed the average cost of connections was $1200 a house - well below the industry average of $2000 to $3500 a house  charged by greenfields fibre builders.

“There’s a lot of colour and movement in claims [for fibre connection costs],” Conroy said.

“In [Alamanda] on the ground the average [connection fee] was $1200. Anyone who tried to charge more was quickly exposed and quickly had to drop their price back to what was the accepted market price.”

The admission opened the possibility that economies of scale created by the National Broadband Network might lower the price of residents in new housing estates trying to connect fibre to their homes.

That cost to the estate developer is often passed on to new home owners in the cost of buying a house-and-land in the estate.

It remains unclear under the NBN project who would foot the bill for connecting homes in existing areas to the NBN fibre.


  • Email a Friend
  • Print Page
Conroy reveals freefall in fibre-to-the-home costs
View larger image View larger image View larger image
View Photo Gallery
""It remains unclear under the NBN project who would foot the bill for connecting homes in existing areas to the NBN fibre" ...errrr the businesses & home owners??? Any one know of a Teleco that ..."
 
 
Comments: 4
Thoughts on this article? Add a comment below.
Maxxi
Dec 10, 2009 5:01 PM
Well that is a surprise, that economies of scale bring down prices and increase efficiencies...

It is also a big surprise that some folks try and inflate their prices shamelessly in similar situations.

Someone should explain that to Henry Ergas and Nick Minchin, not to mention Tony Abbott and the new Smith fellow.

Now where was that pricing calc for $200per month minimum for basic internet that I had seen somewhwre...??
MerariSchroeder
Dec 10, 2009 5:14 PM
@Maxxi "Someone should explain that to Henry Ergas and Nick Minchin... here was that pricing calc for $200per month..."

This article says nothing about brown-field costs. It only speaks of the price being $1200 for green-field estates. And I think the green-field sites are the minority.
Mordd
Dec 10, 2009 6:53 PM
Waits for a home DIY connect yourself to FTTH kit lol.
Hmmm - OK
Dec 10, 2009 7:19 PM
"It remains unclear under the NBN project who would foot the bill for connecting homes in existing areas to the NBN fibre"

...errrr the businesses & home owners???

Any one know of a Teleco that doesn't charge a connection fee?

$1200-$3000 in greenfield sites, you can expect at least that (and possibly higher with a few lame excuses about cost of digging up roads, gas pipes in the way, etc etc) for brown field sites.

If and when copper connections are removed from the exchanges there will be little choice for people who want/need telecommunications - businesses need to stay competative.

The choice will be no connection or pay the fee - which is exactly how Telstra is running its locked Velocity "smart communities" right now.

One thing for sure Teleco's won't lose out and we'll pay for it!
Comment:
Want to participate in the discussion?
Or log in now to comment
 
 
 
Top Stories
Analysis: Net gambling next on ISP filter hitlist?
Stakeholders brand online gambling laws ineffective.
 
NBN3 Wireless plan needs 4G spectrum fast-track
Dark fibre and wireless coalition issues new proposal.
 
Server patch blamed for Westpac outage
Back-up processes keep business customers online.
 

Latest VideosSee all videos »

Latest Comments
""Build it once, build it right, build fibre" said Tony Windsor, yesterday. The coalition would ..."
by umbria Sep 6, 2010 10:18 AM
 
"Content and hosting providers are network ready, it really comes down to software issues (cPanel ..."
by hashkent Sep 6, 2010 9:48 AM
 
"Re Dave68IT: Not that simple. Yes he would have that debt anyway, but at least he would have ..."
by RaTTyRaTT Sep 6, 2010 8:49 AM
 
"The way i see it, as long as you're betting in Australia (playing Tattslotto), the government ..."
by maxama Sep 6, 2010 7:15 AM
 
"Do it once, do it right - it's a nice philosophy. However governments have an appalling record ..."
by RDEFCON1 Sep 5, 2010 6:52 PM
Polls
Was sacking four Victorian police officers for inappropriate email use too harsh?

   |   View results
Yes
  55%
 
No
  45%
TOTAL VOTES: 119

Vote