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Telstra tells Rudd: We need high-speed broadband

3 October 2008 01:32PM
Tags: telstra | rudd | broadband | nbn | national | broadband | network

Telstra has told PM Rudd that high-speed broadband must be the first cab off the rank. But on whose terms?

Telstra's group managing director of Public Policy and Communications David Quilty claimed the National Broadband Network (NBN) was crucial for Australia's future economic productivity and it must be fast-tracked or the nation risks falling behind at a critical economic juncture.

According to Quilty, high-speed broadband is the great enabling technology, a fact personally recognised by Rudd in making his strong commitment to the NBN.

"Unlike other infrastructure projects which are focused on a particular location or industry sector, the project will benefit all Australians and will unleash the nation's untapped spirit of innovation and entrepreneurship,” he claimed.

He claimed it has been trying to build the NBN for more than three years, but has been stymied at every turn by backward-looking regulation, red-tape and bureaucracy.

However independent telco analyst Paul Budde claims Telstra only wants an NBN built on its own terms.

"It wants an NBN that will net it the right return on investment," said Budde.

"However the government is saying it has to be right for the country and far more affordable than the price regulated by the telco giant."

According to Budde, Telstra has not genuinely sat around to discuss with the government about the national interest of the NBN, or put forth its interest in the network.

However the telco analyst understands the frustration Telstra feels at having no decision made on the NBN.

"The previous government and the current government are too chicken to make a decision," claimed Budde.

"It has taken years for them to sort it out and there is no guarantee about what decision is made about the NBN well into 2009."

   


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Thoughts on this article? Add a comment below.
Comments: 6
Budde is usually right in his comments, however to say that "The previous government and the current government are too chicken to make a decision," is only half correct. The previous Government did make a decision but the current Government pulled the pin on it (admittedly due to OPEL's alleged failure to meet the contract). However, the current Government is clearly scared of making a decision. I guess we'll wait a few more years till we actually reap some benefits from all the.
iTnews - comments icon Posted by ChrisOct 3, 2008 5:33 PM
Um the previous government had Opel but it was cancelled as it allegedly didn't meet the standard needed (hard to tell when it's not built) so to say the previous govt did nothing is a lie. You could also say that the current Government has taken a step back.

Even if Opel wasn't going to meet the required coverage it's better than nothing.

Worse yet is that Adsl2+ rollout (Telstra's "premium Adsl2+) doesn't count as the only thing that's premium about it is the cost of it) has effectively stalled due to the uncertain environment conditions such as the NBN debate and the ongoing arguments about exchange access.

iTnews - comments icon Posted by Tim KOct 3, 2008 10:49 PM
Ok right Telstra at what price? and how much data you get for it per month? $100 for 600mb? and then $150 per gb excess? High speed access is good but with your piddly download allowances and having the uploads counted too is not going to make it attractive.
iTnews - comments icon Posted by DaveOct 4, 2008 1:43 PM
Give up Telstra. No one wants your over priced, poor service. The number of Internet illiterate parents is declining with each passing day, its time to compete based on products. Oh oh. They just dont get it. We dont want 'speed', we want quota.
iTnews - comments icon Posted by SydneyOct 4, 2008 3:07 PM
And the winner is.... TELSTRA!!!!
Unlimited downloads with a 12 gb limit then they will shape it to 64 kbs. They will jack up the price from $60 to $100
But, we know Telstra, they will tell every single Australians to look at the bright side. Our internet speed will be 100 mbps.


iTnews - comments icon Posted by TonyOct 5, 2008 9:33 PM
Funny how it's important now that there's government money on the table! Where was this commitment previously as our speeds crawled forwards while the rest of the world progressed in leaps and bounds?
iTnews - comments icon Posted by funkygOct 6, 2008 10:19 AM
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