Major Australian carrier Vocus sees benefits in being onshore .. and selling 
itself to a local consortium.

By Chris Duckett | May 7, 2021 -- 06:37 GMT (16:37 AEST) | Topic: Security
https://www.zdnet.com/article/vocus-turning-to-sovereignty-as-its-competitive-advantage/


.. Two Vocus executives spoke this week at CommsDay Summit, with both 
reinforcing the company's pitch as being able to provide sovereignty to its 
customers.

"Sovereignty is a factor which Vocus increasingly sees as a competitive 
advantage in a market where security is critical to success," Vocus general 
manager for government and strategic projects Michael Ackland said.

"We've seen an accelerating trend, particularly from government customers, 
where the use of sovereign assets is not just a nice-to-have but a must-have."

The company is currently on a path that will see it be acquired by Macquarie 
Infrastructure and Aware Super, at a valuation of AU$3.5 billion, to remain in 
local hands. It was something Ackland said would help with the sovereignty play.

"It's about having a sovereign network, which is supported by two of 
Australia's leading institutions and operated by secure staff, based in secure 
network operations centres," Vocus COO Ellie Sweeney said a day earlier.

Sweeney outlined that Vocus runs a separate secure network, called VAS, 
alongside its regular commercial network using segregated systems and 
equipment, while adding that the company will double its capital expenditure on 
network security during the next fiscal year.

In March, two years after it first ran the idea up the proverbial flagpole, the 
federal Digital Transformation Agency released its Hosting Certification 
Framework for data centre providers, which Sweeney said could be extended to 
network providers.

"It's not much of a stretch to consider that if government is so concerned 
about how, when and where data is stored and processed, the next logical step 
is to take an active interest in how, when and where data is carried across 
networks," the COO said.

Sweeney added the company saw opportunities in building submarine cables as 
"new sovereign infrastructure".

This should hardly be surprising, given in 2018 Canberra decided to use around 
AU$200 million of its foreign aid budget to lock Huawei out of building a 
subsea cable to the Solomon Islands and Papua New Guinea. Instead of Huawei, 
Vocus eventually picked up a AU$137 million contract to build the cable.

"As we have seen over the past year or two in the submarine market, governments 
around the globe are willing to intervene to ensure cables are built by trusted 
vendors and are routed through trusted territories to avoid geopolitical 
issues," Sweeney said.

The Vocus chief operating officer said the consortium model used to fund subsea 
cables might be dead, at least in the eyes of government customers.

"We've certainly seen a growing appetite from our wholesale customers seeking 
capacity from Asia to the US via Australia to avoid politically contentious 
areas to our north," she said.

"Vocus' complete ownership of the ASC [Australia-Singapore Cable] cable and the 
domestic network it's connected to gives us a unique advantage for customers 
seeking certainty of about where their data is travelling. Route diversity is 
also increasingly seen as a critical factor, both for terrestrial networks and 
international networks."

During her speech, Sweeney announced Vocus would build a cable to close the 
loop on its national network between Geraldton and Port Hedland, under the 
banner of Project Horizon.

"In total, Project Horizon will establish a 2,000-kilometre network of both new 
and existing fibre between Port Hedland and Perth via Newman, Meekatharra, and 
Geraldton," Sweeney said.

"The Horizon system will be designed with transmission capacity starting at 
38Tbps per fibre pair, giving us a clear upgrade path ... as demand requires 
it. It will provide another layer of redundancy and give Vocus a 'figure 8' of 
network rings across Australia's eastern and western states. It will allow 
Vocus to provide geographically diverse backhaul out of Darwin."

The company is also planning to connect ASC with its North-West Cable System 
between Darwin and Port Hedland, as well as branch the North-West cable to 
Kupang on the island of Timor.

SOVEREIGNTY IN SPACE

Vocus not only sees sovereignty over terrestrial infrastructure as an 
advantage; it also wants to push it on the arena of low-Earth orbit (LEO) 
satellites.

With its national fibre footprint, Vocus believes it is well placed to 
capitalise on LEO players wanting ground stations to keep latency low.

"These low latencies are dependent on the deployment of extensive ground 
infrastructure with high-capacity fibre backhaul, so processing and storage can 
occur as close to the edge of the network as possible. This means having ground 
stations in regional areas close to where the end-users are located, to 
minimise round-trip time," Ackland said.

"By now you should be starting to see why a fibre company is taking such a 
strong interest in LEO satellites."

Ackland said the company's controlled environment vaults (CEVs) could be 
upgraded to function as ground stations "all over the country". The other card 
Vocus has up its sleeve, according to Ackland, is the millimetre wave spectrum 
it gained in December alongside the likes of SpaceX Starlink, Field Solutions 
Group, WorldVu (One Web), Inmarsat, Viasat, O3B/SES, New Skies Satellites/SES 
as well Telstra, Optus, and NBN.

"Our fibre network provides the foundation to install many more CEVs and ground 
stations in the future as LEO satellite operators require them. And while we 
have the fibre, and we have the CEVs to establish ground stations, we now have 
another key asset to make our LEO satellite business a reality -- the spectrum 
required to turn these CEVs into ground stations," he said.

Ackland said there was a strong argument that LEO satellites could replace 
voice services in the bush, which he believes would remove the need for Telstra 
to hook up premises with copper lines under the Universal Service Obligation.

The Vocus executive went further and questioned whether NBN should be investing 
in its loss-making regional networks.

"Wouldn't it be more economically efficient to subsidise non-NBN services to 
ensure they're set at a similar price to metropolitan equivalents, and for NBN 
to write off the losses? These are no longer questions that can be left for 
another day," he said.

"These are questions which need to be considered here and now, since LEO 
operators like Starlink now offering commercial services."

Even though Ackland said the LEO service is better than fixed wireless, and 
sometimes fibre to the node and HFC connectivity, he doesn't believe the world 
will switch completely.

"They will provide a viable alternative in many instances where latency meant 
satellite could never have been considered," Ackland said.

"I should also make it clear that LEO satellites are not going to make NBN's 
two Sky Muster satellites redundant overnight either."

Vocus is using NBN business satellite services to complement its terrestrial 
footprint when providing connectivity to the likes of the Australian Bureau of 
Meteorology (BoM).

In March, the Bureau called on the federal government to have its own satellite 
capability.

"All satellite data used by the Bureau is received from international partners 
... this arrangement has worked well but access to this data is not guaranteed 
into the future," BoM said.

"In recent years there has been an exponential growth in commercial satellite 
data providers offering new business models, resulting in potential threats and 
opportunities in the space industry. In the future, this may pose a risk to the 
volume of data the Bureau can access if current arrangements for the free and 
open exchange of international satellite data are reduced."

The Bureau recently added to its wishlist, floating the idea of running a 
subsea cable to Antarctica and improving satellite connectivity to its weather 
stations.

Earlier this week, Vocus was part of the launch of space communications startup 
Quasar, which is looking to provide ground stations as-a-service via 
electronically-steered phased array technology.

"This technology emulates the behaviour of a traditional parabolic antenna, but 
no longer requires the antenna to mechanically track satellites across the 
sky," Ackland explained.

"As a result, Quasar's technology is able to connect to hundreds of satellites 
at once, managing connections through time slots for uplink and downlink 
activity.

"One thing which excites me about our work with Quasar is that it's an 
Australian company, backed by Australian funding, developing a sovereign 
Australian capability in the modern-day space race."

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