Gillard to reveal NBN plan "summary"

By Ry Crozier on Nov 24, 2010 2:39 PM
Filed under Communications

New document created from the secret plan.

The Federal Government has announced it will release a summary of the NBN Co business plan before seeking a final Senate vote on the Telstra split bill.

Read a 36-page NBN business plan summary document here.

The breakthrough was achieved by key independent Senator Nick Xenophon in eleventh hour negotiations with Prime Minister Julia Gillard today.

"We will shortly be releasing a document that summarises the NBN Co business case," Gillard said.

"We're determined it is possible to release carefully selected material that answers some of the [independents and crossbenchers'] key questions and allow them to explain their decision [on the Telstra split bill] to their constituents.

"We've been very careful. The material being released will not cause market uncertainty."

Gillard said the document confirmed the NBN was being built on a financially-viable basis. It would include details of the products NBN Co would offer and on what timelines; however, it did not contain details such as "places retail providers will be able to plug into the NBN" - the points of interconnect, which were under ACCC consideration.

The document would be provided to Senators Xenophon and Fielding first before it was made public.

Senator Steve Fielding had reportedly welcomed the release of the plan, according to reports on ABC News 24, although it was unclear whether or not he would support the passage of the Telstra split bill.

Fielding and Xenophon's votes were crucial for the Telstra split legislation to pass.

Xenophon said that he would characterise the release of the document as a "compromise", not a "backdown" by Labor.

He said he was "grateful" for Gillard's intervention on the NBN business plan.

"I don't think we would have got to this stage if not for her intervention," he said.

He refused to criticise the Communications Minister over his stance not to release the NBN business plan until next month.

It also appeared Xenophon had won a concession on Productivity Commission involvement in the NBN project, stating the Commission would "be there to give continual input" to the Government over the eight years of the network's construction.

 
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Gillard to reveal NBN plan "summary"
"@Karl, it might be an idea if you found out something about the subject before posting here. The NBN project is 93% fibre, 4% wireless deployed beyond the reach of the fibre, and 3% satellite ..."
 
 
 
 
Comments: 7
RAS
Nov 24, 2010 7:20 PM
Looks like Telstra proposed deal is too cheap.

Also what are the costs and benefits of alternatives to NBN.

Won't we all be looking for mobile solutions that are superfast eg superfast wireless rather in years to come?? Big Risk
IT DUDE
Nov 25, 2010 10:53 AM
Looks like you don't understand whats being proposed.

If you can't see the cost benefit to Australia as a WHOLE, through better communications infrastructure. Unplug, don't blog or post, you don't need to know.

The BIGGEST RISK IS THE ALTERNATIVES.

People keep talking about alternatives, but I'm yet to hear any sound advice from people Who HAVE Engineering degrees and know what this technology can and can't do to offer ANY. I know there isn't any ... period.

All I hear is MEDIA SPIN that's designed to divide or sell news stories... smoke screens to reality.

I'm astounded that its even still debated. For you to even mention WIRELESS as an alternative is mind BOGGLING!
The fickle nature of wireless is no alternative, and in the end won't be any cheaper. Because of all the ad hock fixes that we'll all have to endure and the costs to business due to lack of connection.
Before you know it, we will be back to where we started with a hodgepodge of technology that's always breaking down. NOT MENTIONING ANY NAMES : )

Wait, just move to a better signal area. Hell why not move regional Australia to all congested cities. That's a REAL alternative, ...no?

Wasn't this suppose to be a unifying civic venture to bring Australia together? Well let start by using the most appropriate ROBUST technology that will endure and live up to what it was designed for, and lets catch up to the rest of the WORLD.

They [ forward thinking NATIONS ]have had this for years, and its still not REDUNDANT! You keep watching Star Trek movies and HOPE for better WIRELESS FUTURE Technology that can deliver RELIABILITY. Until then dream on, they'll finish this infrastructure by then. And I'll still be skeptical of its delivery.

Don't get me wrong its a NICE idea, but just that ... an idea. It will always be used in conjunction and an add on or supplement to to cable technologies as other FORWARD thinking nations have found out to their COST.

Lets not waste money experimenting with dubious solutions. It never works out.

Apologies if my words sounded harsh.

Cheers
IT DUDE
Nov 25, 2010 10:58 AM
Don't even mention the National Security Implications of WIRELESS TECHNOLOGY.

If Australia went there, we would be laughing stock of the WORLD. Not something I would wish for.

Peace
KarL
Nov 25, 2010 3:11 PM
Yes we have just made a laughing stock for the rest of the world.

http://www.itnews.com.au/News/239650,nbn-co-to-build-wireless-network-from-late-2011.aspx
Francis
Nov 29, 2010 5:30 AM
@ IT Dude.

You are spot on, but let me add a point or two.
I have tried calling an ambulance in an emergency with a Mobile Phone from my home but could not as my home is in a communications black spot. That does not happen with a fixed line.
Next there is the problem of enough wireless spectrum for everyone to use it, in times of conflict Wireless can also be Jammed.
Finally for the Nay Sayers we have other examples. FM radio is tending to overtake FM radio and now we have a new signal Digital Radio. These have all progressed from the humble crystal set to the valve radio then the Transistor radio and now the Radio built on a silicon chip. Excuse me if I have left out a few steps in process such as the progression from a Diode to a Triode and finally a Pentode Radio valve.
Copper and wireless are now being stretched to do things they were never meant or envisaged to do, some of this is achieved by what I call Voodoo or Black Magic.
Now ask yourself, What car would I rather drive, A "T" model ford or a new Ford "Falcon", because that is akin to what we are looking at here.
KarL
Nov 29, 2010 10:19 AM
Why are you people still attacking Wireless when it is clearly revealed that NBN is building WIRELESS? Is the NBN wireless any better? Flawed logic to me.
gnome
Nov 30, 2010 11:03 AM

@Karl, it might be an idea if you found out something about the subject before posting here.

The NBN project is 93% fibre, 4% wireless deployed beyond the reach of the fibre, and 3% satellite for the rest.

It's already been pointed out a number of times that an all-wireless national network is not technically possible nor desirable for a number of reasons.

Your comment "we have just made a laughing stock for the rest of the world" is a) wrong, and b) silly.
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