iTnews
  • Home
  • News
  • Technology
  • Telco/ISP

NBN Co finally reveals interconnect locations

By Ry Crozier on Oct 22, 2010 6:34AM
NBN Co finally reveals interconnect locations

Open to public comment.

NBN Co has finally revealed the proposed locations for over 200 points of interconnect (POIs) for ISPs, almost seven months after the list was first promised.

The network builder exhibited the detailed list in a public position paper [PDF, page 42] it has submitted as part of a joint public consultation on POI locations it launched with the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) yesterday.

NBN Co said it favoured a "composite approach" for the location of POIs - a model it believed would best facilitate uniform national wholesale prices and not disadvantage potential access seekers.

A POI is a place where two networks interconnect and exchange traffic - essentially the place where NBN Co will hand over traffic carried on its network to the access seeker's [ISP] network.

NBN Co revealed scant details about the locations on a map at a conference earlier this year but has since kept ISPs waiting on where it proposed to locate the POIs.

The locations are crucial to ISP profitability under an NBN, as they determine the cost of interconnecting with the next-generation network.

click to view full size image
Courtesy: NBN Co public paper.

One option was to locate POIs close to each fibre-serving area (which could aggregate about 55,000 connections to homes and businesses) so that NBN traffic would be handed over to ISP networks "as quickly as possible" - but that would require ISPs to run backhaul out to all these distributed points.

That would not only be expensive for ISPs but provided no guarantee that ISPs would bother to service more remote areas where there was no existing competitive backhaul and where building their own would be uneconomical.

At the other extreme, POIs could be centralised to service a large number of fibre serving areas each.

That would see NBN Co carry traffic all the way to capital cities, lessening the burden on ISPs to buy or deploy extensive backhaul networks to haul traffic vast distances back to their points of presence.

But there were fears that a centralised model could strand existing transmission network assets that had been built up on certain routes over time.

"It is likely that a very low number of consolidated POIs risks stranding existing infrastructure assets and foreclosing the potential for further backhaul entry," the ACCC warned in a discussion paper.

There was a need for a model that balanced the expenses faced by ISPs with the interests of existing backhaul operators.

NBN Co was advocating a mixed or "composite" model where it would build 14 aggregation POIs in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Adelaide and Perth.

It would then locate up to 195 more POIs in or near areas it termed connectivity serving areas (CSAs) - a relatively new aggregation point in NBN Co's network architecture diagrams.

A CSA, NBN Co said, could consist of one or more fibre serving areas. A POI would sit either at a CSA or above multiple CSAs, depending on where it was needed.

While NBN Co was advocating a composite approach, the Government-funded telco and the ACCC were seeking public comment on the issue and proposed locations.

Responses from the industry were due by November 8.

"NBN Co recognises however that there are many factors that need to be considered in making a decision on POI location, so we are very pleased to be supporting the ACCC's consultation process on this important industry issue," NBN Co chief Mike Quigley said.

Got a news tip for our journalists? Share it with us anonymously here.
Copyright © iTnews.com.au . All rights reserved.
Tags:
broadbandinterconnectinternetispslocationsnbncoofpoipointstelco/isp

Partner Content

Avoiding CAPEX by making on-premise IT more cloud-like
Promoted Content Avoiding CAPEX by making on-premise IT more cloud-like
Accenture and Google Cloud team up to create a loveable, Australian-first, renewable energy product
Promoted Content Accenture and Google Cloud team up to create a loveable, Australian-first, renewable energy product
How to turn digital complexity into competitive advantage
Promoted Content How to turn digital complexity into competitive advantage
Security "mindset shift" needed to protect organisations
Promoted Content Security "mindset shift" needed to protect organisations

Sponsored Whitepapers

Free eBook: Digital Transformation 101 – for banks
Free eBook: Digital Transformation 101 – for banks
Why financial services need to tackle their Middle Office
Why financial services need to tackle their Middle Office
Learn: The latest way to transfer files between customers
Learn: The latest way to transfer files between customers
Extracting the value of data using Unified Observability
Extracting the value of data using Unified Observability
Planning before the breach: You can’t protect what you can’t see
Planning before the breach: You can’t protect what you can’t see

Events

  • Forrester Technology & Innovation Asia Pacific 2022
By Ry Crozier
Oct 22 2010
6:34AM
0 Comments

Related Articles

  • Telstra boosts optical links to 400 Gbps
  • NBN Co boosts its business service to 10Gbps
  • TPG Telecom puts fresh targets on IT simplification
  • TPG launches 10Gbps broadband for business
Share on Twitter Share on Facebook Share on LinkedIn Share on Whatsapp Email A Friend

Most Read Articles

Telstra deregisters 900MHz sites “hindering” Optus 5G rollout

Telstra deregisters 900MHz sites “hindering” Optus 5G rollout

Aussie Broadband nears end of NBN PoI fibre rollout

Aussie Broadband nears end of NBN PoI fibre rollout

Defence, DEWR drop $160m on Microsoft software, Azure

Defence, DEWR drop $160m on Microsoft software, Azure

Transport for NSW exits Global Switch data centre

Transport for NSW exits Global Switch data centre

Digital Nation

Domino’s invests in observability for zero contact delivery
Domino’s invests in observability for zero contact delivery
Criteo to fork out $94.7m for consent breaches
Criteo to fork out $94.7m for consent breaches
Megatrends shaping the next 20 years: CSIRO
Megatrends shaping the next 20 years: CSIRO
Australia will lose 11 percent of jobs to automation by 2040: Forrester
Australia will lose 11 percent of jobs to automation by 2040: Forrester
COVER STORY: How KPMG, Mirvac and ASX use blockchain to build trust in the property sector
COVER STORY: How KPMG, Mirvac and ASX use blockchain to build trust in the property sector
All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in any form without prior authorisation.
Your use of this website constitutes acceptance of nextmedia's Privacy Policy and Terms & Conditions.