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Open hostility between Telstra and Terria over NBN

By Kathryn Small
9 September 2008 05:35PM
Tags: telstra | terria | nbn | broadband

Former Premier Bob Carr and his former treasurer Michael Egan have weighed in on opposite sides of Telstra and Terria's NBN war.

The open hostilities were sparked by comments in today’s The Australian. Terria, a consortium of telecommunications companies, said that the National Broadband Network (NBN) must be a monopoly to survive.

“Our proposition to the Government is that no party be allowed to expand the network and operate in competition to the national broadband network,” said Terria bid manager Mick Simmons.

“Because of Australia’s size and population this network must be a monopoly and must be structurally separated. If you don’t have a structurally separated monopoly network where access prices are regulated, it will not be viable.

“So you must preclude any alternative broadband network," Simmons said.

Telstra shot back this afternoon that a monopolised broadband network would make Australia 'an international laughing stock'.

“Terria’s stunning demands show it wants to take Australia back to the last century and re-monopolise the nation’s telecommunications industry, depriving Australians the choice and innovation produced by true infrastructure competition,” said David Quilty, Group Managing Director for Telstra Public Policy and Communications.

“While Terria crows about fairness and encouraging competition it is really the monopolist hiding in the shadows.”

Terria and Telstra are vying for a contract to build the NBN, potentially worth $30 billion. The Rudd government will invest $4.7 billion in the network, making it the largest infrastructure commitment by the new government.

Simmons told iTnews that "Mr Quilty is clearly just getting out of bed on the facts of the new NBN.

“NBN is by its very nature going to be akin to a monopoly asset and therefore requires appropriate regulatory controls to be placed around it. This is why Terria has consistently called for structural separation to enable genuine equivalency of access for all competitors.

Telstra on the other hand wants less regulation than exists today.”

Surprisingly, the lobbying effort has faced off two former political colleagues –- former Premier Bob Carr and his treasurer Michael Egan.

Carr is a consultant for Macquarie Group and legal firm Mallesons Stephen Jacques, both of which are advising Telstra on its bid.

“I think it’s very important that Australia has a high-quality broadband network,” Carr told The Australian. “Telstra is the only entity that will be able to put that in place in the required time.”

Egan has chaired the Terria consortium since June this year. When asked by The Australian about any rivalry between him and his former political master, Egan seemed unconcerned.

“Bob and I are good friends, and even in politics we would find ourselves arguing for different propositions.”

   


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Thoughts on this article? Add a comment below.
Comments: 12
Oh this is real keystone cops from "Tierra". Who needs Dr Phil to set the record straight when you have "Tierra" shooting itself in the foot. I am not necessary pro Telstra but these guys are laughable!!
iTnews - comments icon Posted by allanSep 9, 2008 6:00 PM
Telstra is the monopolist hiding in the shadow and always have been. This is just typical word twisting and manipulation.

Terria want a network that all competitors can have access to, with regulated pricing.

Telstra want a network, with no seperation and with no regulatory pricing. And if they had the choice, no access for competitors.

If Telstra win this bid, our NBN is down the drain.
iTnews - comments icon Posted by chrisSep 9, 2008 6:38 PM
Telstra have the best technology in the country by a long shot, even we want our technology to be better than it is today then there is really only one choice! Telstra. Terria is a joke and not put forth and viable reason why us the people should back them.
iTnews - comments icon Posted by DamianSep 9, 2008 6:41 PM
telstra is only threatened because it will lose its monopoly. the government should be tendering a contract to build only. keep it in public hands.
iTnews - comments icon Posted by octdiamondSep 9, 2008 7:00 PM
Telstra have backward technology. The still rely on copper. If there were so advanced why haven't they decided to do this a decade ago.
iTnews - comments icon Posted by missy fitSep 9, 2008 7:29 PM
Hey Allan,
You said exactly the same comment over on an AustralianIT article ("Terria a 'closet monopolist'")

Lets get genuine people rather than preconfigured responses.
iTnews - comments icon Posted by GregSep 9, 2008 9:54 PM
LOL@Damian ... Telstra have the best Technology?!?

Um, the ADSL1 standard has included full speed 8mbps/1mbps ... want to take a guess at how long it took Telstra to open up the full 8mpbs?!? EIGHT years ... wanna make a guess at when they will uncap unloads speeds on ADSL1 ... How long did it take Telstra to offer ADSL2+?!? Oh that's right, their competitors had it running for 2 years before Telstra even considered it ...

Yep, Telstra really known this Technology stuff real well, and they are such innovators ..

LONG LIVE TELSTRA TO BUILD A NBN THAT WILL COST END USERS $100pm FOR 512kbps RUNNING ON VSDL5+ CAPABLE EQUIPMENT!!!!!!
iTnews - comments icon Posted by LOL@DamianSep 9, 2008 11:52 PM
Pot, black, anyone? anyone? Especially David Quilty's little gem. The whole original reason Telstra wanted a NBN was for that very reason, to cut customers off from access to competitors at a retail level, ie Telstra wholesale or the highway for other Telcos/ISPs. Which is what will happen if Telstra wins.

Despite Telstra's claim of not being monopoly minded, what other entity could build a NBN with only a target market of ~30% of telephones or data penetration? Telstra would overbuild knowing it could shift it's significant numbers of customers over and whilst not make a profit initially, it would kill the other network.

Wouldn't that be a predatory act? To put it another way, instead of doing all it can to make it's own NBN bid as attractive as possible, it's resorting to threatening the viability of the proposed competitors NBN (and our taxpayer funds).
iTnews - comments icon Posted by SeanSep 10, 2008 1:54 AM
telstra is only threatened because it will lose its monopoly. the government should be tendering a contract to build only. keep it in public hands.
" Posted by octdiamond, 9/09/2008 7:00:33 PM


You Hit the nail on the head.
The government needs to allow telstra to construct the network, but own, maintain, and lease the network to competitiors.

iTnews - comments icon Posted by d inesonSep 10, 2008 6:18 AM
Oh Mr Quilty, you are such good entertainment! 'RE-monopolise'? Hilarious! If only you weren't actually trying to be serious...

I don't understand how Telstra can even be considered for the NBN - they are rated among the world's worst ISPs, and they OWN THE NATION'S ENTIRE FREAKIN' NETWORK!

The Australian public paid for Telstra's exisiting network to be built, and now we have to pay to build another one. That the government would even consider going down that road again defies belief...
iTnews - comments icon Posted by RandomExcessSep 10, 2008 6:16 PM
You all really have no idea!

The Australian public paid for Telstra's exisiting network to be built, and now we have to pay to build another one. That the government would even consider going down that road again defies belief..." Posted by RandomExcess, 10/09/2008 6:16:49 PM

True taxpayers did fund the Telstra copper network.... Then Telstra Payed the Australian Gov for it.

Telstra is really the only viable option here. why waste time? stick with dialup
iTnews - comments icon Posted by jamesSep 12, 2008 3:34 PM
TELSTRA NBN
iTnews - comments icon Posted by wallyOct 27, 2008 1:34 PM
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