Conroy shortlists next 20 NBN sites

 

UPDATE: Western Australia to get a look-in?

The Federal Government has selected the next 20 sites across Australia to receive high-speed broadband as part of the $43 billion national broadband network rollout.

The location of the sites will be revealed by the end of the week, according to Communications Minister Stephen Conroy. [UPDATE 08/07/2010 - The sites have been announced.]

Conroy told iTnews today that NBN Co engineers would dictate which areas are connected next. 

"The engineers rule my life on this," he said. "And I have a matrix of issues that they use to determine where we go.

"I'll get in trouble for the next story, but when they came to me with the first five [mainland NBN sites], there wasn't one in Western Australia. And I said to them - guys, you do know that the N in NBN stands for National. Last time I checked Western Australia was part of the nation."

The Minister said pre-requisites from an engineering perspective included "whether or not [NBN Co] can get easy access to the local council infrastructure, if a council has got existing duct space."

It would also be determined as to whether a council is willing to allow overhead cables in their streets. 

NBN Co would warm to councils that say "look, we don't mind whether it's overhead or underground, we're happy to have you."

"I'd love to tell you I have some significant influence on that but the truth is I don't," Conroy said.

The announcement comes as NBN Co prepares to start construction work at five mainland test sites announced back in March.

It caps a recent flurry of NBN-related announcements that appears to coincide with rising speculation about a looming Federal election.

Last week, NBN Co and Conroy announced the Victorian capital would host the multi-million dollar NBN network operations centre.

Internet service providers also revealed they had connected their first customers to the NBN in Tasmania.


Conroy shortlists next 20 NBN sites
"@as.davey - WA is in the Australian Constitution at "Definitions" (Clause 4, 6). And although there was some doubt as to whether WA would gets its act together in time to join the Federation, the ..."
By nate.cochrane
 
 
 
Comments: 9
singo79
Jul 7, 2010 3:21 PM
Please be Broken Hill, please be Broken Hill, please be Broken Hill.

Sorry if I am holding high expectations on this, but when you are stuck with Telstra and they refuse to do anything about upgrading their infrastructure your only hope can be something as instrumental as the NBN.

Half the residents in my town cannot get ADSL due to Telstra's poor wiring practices, therefore their only option is Telstra Wireless broadband at quite a significant cost more then ADSL. It is very disheartening when you are sitting on an ADSL1 connection and your mate on the other side of town has to use wireless, with its lag, poor pings and congestion with everyone making mobile phone calls.

The NBN is the only hope for my town and I imagine there are many others in the same boat.

Thank goodness for the Federal Government implementing the NBN, for there was certainly no end in sight for us in terms of dealing with Telstra.
Rossyduck
Jul 7, 2010 4:19 PM
singo, be afraid, very afraid if NBN Co come a knocking. NBN is a lovelly idea but in the hands of NBN Co and a government scrambling for votes you could be out of the frying pan into the fire. Just economic devastation in their wake so far. Far rather have our $$$billions of taxpayer funding building better and cheaper backhaul allowing private enterprise to provide your service.
vandermast
Jul 7, 2010 4:39 PM
@Rossyduck - The NBN is the best form of public sector investment as it has already spurred private investment in submarine cable links. Both Nextgen and Pacific Fibre are waiting for Labour to get re-elected to ensure the NBN will go ahead before they add their own 2.56Tbps Perth-Jakarta link (http://www.zdnet.com.au/nextgen-flags-perth-jakarta-missing-link-339300414.htm) and 5.12Tbps Sydney-LA link (http://www.pacificfibre.net/) to effectively double Australia's international internet bandwidth from 6Tbps to 13Tbps by 2012.
umbria
Jul 7, 2010 4:58 PM
singo, you might be in luck. Broken Hill is already getting NBN regional backbone blackspot fibre cf. http://www.nbn.gov.au/content/geographical-rollout so some competitive options to Telstra might follow. At present other ISPs can't get a look in due to monopolistic backhaul pricing.
btone
Jul 7, 2010 6:13 PM
WA eh? Wonder how many of the 'big 20' won't be in marginal federal Labor electorates. Now, let me guess...
anonymous
Jul 7, 2010 7:55 PM

Don't be rude, btone. There is no greater emergency revolution, etc, in Australia today than making our beloved comms minister look useful.

If he doesn't, Julia will wake up to him and we might have to put up with someone who actually understands the comms portfolio.

Why do the initials KL keep popping into my mind?
Rhino
Jul 7, 2010 9:06 PM
@singo...that bipeds mate, if Broken Hill is a marginal seat, then you might get it sooner than you think. If not, then you might have to wait like the rest of us.
as.davey@gmail.com
Jul 8, 2010 1:26 PM
Conroy: "Last time I checked Western Australia was part of the nation.". Maybe the engineers were going off the Constitution: "Whereas the people of New South Wales, Victoria, South Australia, Queensland, and Tasmania, humbly relying..." :)
nate.cochrane
Jul 9, 2010 9:46 AM
@as.davey - WA is in the Australian Constitution at "Definitions" (Clause 4, 6). And although there was some doubt as to whether WA would gets its act together in time to join the Federation, the state's first premier, John Forrest, pushed it to the line for the starter's gun on New Year's Day 1901.

But maybe New Zealand should get a guernsey in the NBN, too; they certainly need it? (Yes, New Zealand is in the Constitution but I guess they had enough sense to go their own way).

http://www.comlaw.gov.au/comlaw/comlaw.nsf/440c19285821b109ca256f3a001d59b7/57dea3835d797364ca256f9d0078c087/$FILE/ConstitutionAct.pdf
Comments have been disabled for this article.
 
 
 
Top Stories
The New Zealand telco problem
Opinion: Could Telstra save Kiwi telcos?
 
IT price probe to 'name and shame' gougers
Industry ducking the issue, committee claims.
 
Revealed: 2012 e-government award winners
Government highlights projects, professionals of the year.
 
Sign up to receive iTnews email bulletins
   FOLLOW US...

Latest VideosSee all videos »

Latest Comments
Polls
Should the Government enact new legislation to protect copyright holders in the digital age?

   |   View results
Yes
  19%
 
No
  81%
TOTAL VOTES: 480

Vote