NBN Co explains a micrometeorite hit Sky Muster as it considers caretaker 
provisions

The looming federal election could scupper plans to launch FttC upgrades to 
full fibre.


Written by Chris Duckett, APAC Editor on February 16, 2022 | Topic: Broadband 
https://www.zdnet.com/article/nbn-co-explains-a-micrometeorite-hit-sky-muster-as-it-considers-caretaker-provisions/


The company responsible for the National Broadband Network has detailed to 
Senate Estimates how 46,500 of its 112,000 satellite customer base were knocked 
offline, as well as how 600 of those customers remained offline for the next 
fortnight.

Speaking on Tuesday night, NBN chief development officer for regional and 
remote Gavin Williams said the incident was not the company's finest hour, but 
it was "unprecedented".

Williams said at 8:30pm on December 21, Sky Muster manager Optus informed NBN 
it had an "off-orbit condition of our second satellite," due to a 
micrometeorite hitting it.

"It effectively makes the satellite's body rotate whilst it remains in its 
orbit. So the satellite is no longer pointing at the appropriate spot on earth. 
So the payload, the transmission system on that satellite, is effectively 
switched off for that period," he said.

Seven hours later, the satellite refound Earth and recovered, and service 
resumed for all but 573 customers. For them, the outage was just getting 
started.

Williams said in that instance, the outage was due to missing parameters in a 
configuration file used in customer premises equipment.

"It took quite a long time actually to delve into what was wrong and how you 
could recover," he said.

"In the meantime, we had a few theories, we were mobilising people off of 
annual leave to potentially do 600 truck rolls into the bush. Fortunately, we 
were able to recover with effectively manual intervention."

Although he could not say with total certainty, Williams said a load balancer 
is believed to be the root cause, and NBN is working with its suppliers to 
ensure it doesn't happen again. In the meantime, NBN is armed with emergency 
patches and workarounds if it sees the issue again.

Elsewhere in the hearing, NBN said it was on track to launch its FttN upgrade 
ordering next month, as planned, but the looming election could hit the fibre 
to the curb upgrade launch that the company had told retailers would arrive in 
early May. Pretty much exactly when the next federal election is expected to be.

"That's something we actually need to consider as to whether it's something we 
should do or not during a caretaker period, to be honest with you," NBN CEO 
Stephen Rue told Estimates.

"I want to get FttN launched first and then we need to think about whether 
that's something we should do during [the caretaker period]."

Rue added the company was seeking advice on its caretaker obligations and it 
would then make a decision on the launch date.

The CEO also said NBN has one million FttN premises in the design stage for the 
upgrade, and 540,000 in the build phase, however, it would only launch sales 
with 50,000 premises. The cost of the new fibre lead-in is expected to be under 
AU$1,500, with NBN levying a AU$200 charge on retailers if users order a 
service that needs a fibre line, and seek to downgrade within the first year.

In late June or early July, NBN will be deploying a fair use policy for fixed 
wireless users that will see them get reduced speeds for certain traffic 
classes.

If a customer surpasses 400GB in downloads or 120GB in uploads for a month, the 
user will be flagged for the subsequent month. During that time, video 
streaming would be capped at 14Mbps, file sharing would be 1Mbps either way, 
software downloads would be 3Mbps, and game downloads would receive 5Mbps in 
capacity.

"During times of high usage, non-time critical applications would be speed 
limited," Williams said.

"We felt that for a fixed wireless customers. It's a prudent way of managing 
customer experience to get the best for our customers."

On Monday, the Regional Telecommunications Review was published and deemed the 
6Mbps fixed wireless upload speeds as unreasonable.

"We suggest this 6Mbps target and other speed targets need to be significantly 
strengthened as demand continues to increase and pressure on the network grows. 
This is particularly important for upload performance," the report said.

"NBN Co has recently introduced Fixed Wireless Plus plans, which are delivering 
increased download speeds on the network. However, the committee has heard that 
upload speeds on these plans have been reduced from an initial 20Mbps to just 
10Mbps.

"This is insufficient for many of the activities higher-bandwidth users are 
looking to use the service for and inconsistent with the upload speeds 
available to fixed line consumers."

Earlier on Tuesday, deputy secretary at the Department of Infrastructure, 
Transport, Regional Development and Communications Richard Windeyer said 
according to reports he had seen from NBN, the fixed wireless network was 
"holding up very well" and "considerably above the minimum design threshold".
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