David writes,

> What is the value of lives saved? What is the value of lives enhanced?
> What is the value of business facilitated? Not having the infrastructure
> carries costs as well.

Altogether an interesting and well argued debate from both positions regarding 
our infrastructure options.

Regarding these, and perhaps of interest, this afternoon on the NBN website is 
a blog by Bill Morrow. He’s the Chief Executive Officer of nbn. He does make 
some interesting points, naturally in defence of our nbn, but still 
none-the-less interesting …


http://www.nbnco.com.au/blog/the-nbn-project/gigabit-broadband-the-facts.html

Published on 15/02/2017 Last updated on 15/02/2017 at 16:22pm


Gigabit broadband: The facts

There has been a lot of discussion in recent days around the need for Gigabit 
broadband in Australia – let’s set some things straight…

The nbn™ network is here to bring fast broadband to all of Australia by 2020 – 
more than 4 million premises already have access to fast broadband via the nbn™ 
network today.

In just a few months we will be at the halfway point of the rollout.

Next year, we will be three quarters built. By 2020 we will be complete. What 
once seemed impossible is now a reality.

I was asked last week by the media about the need for Gigabit (Gbps) speeds in 
Australia. These are lines that are 40 times faster than plans based on our 
most popular 25Mbps wholesale service.

The fact is, nbn already offers a wholesale 1Gbps product to retail service 
providers, which RSPs can make available to more than 1.5 million homes, and 
has been on sale for around four years.

Currently, there are no retail 1Gbps speed plans on offer from the retailers.

This is, in our opinion, because there is still minimal consumer demand for 
these ultra-fast speeds – especially at the prices retailers would have to 
charge for them.

Our own data shows that 83 per cent of people on services powered by the nbn™ 
network today are ordering retail services based on the two lowest wholesale 
speed tiers 25/5Mbps and 12/1Mbps.

There is currently around a $20-$30 monthly difference between what retailers 
charge for plans based on our 25/5Mbps wholesale service and our 100/40Mbps 
wholesale service – but only 13 percent of end-users are willing to pay that 
relatively small premium for access to that faster tier.

We have to be realistic about what the market is actually telling us about 
demand for ultra-fast services.

Of course, the demand for Gigabit speeds could, and probably will, change – 
current plans for FTTP and DOCSIS 3.1 HFC suggest they will be able to deliver 
such speeds to around 5 million premises on the nbn™ network by 2020 and the 
other parts of our network, with the exception of satellite, have upgrade paths 
to offer the same ultra-fast speeds when demand comes around.

Rather than build for a demand that may materialise in 10 years, we are 
constructing a national network capable of continuous upgrading to meet market 
needs as and when they arise.

There is little point in adding to the already high $49 billion cost of the 
nbn™ network to provide a capability that end users do not yet require and RSPs 
are not selling.

Gigabit demand

We spend a lot of time researching overseas markets about Gigabit speeds, and 
the trends are not what you might think.

We have met with global operators offering 1Gbps services and they willingly 
concede that their end-users are simply not using speeds anywhere near 1Gbps – 
in fact, they would be lucky to actually ever use a fraction of that speed – 
so, at present, the Gigabit game is really about marketing, not actual utility.

Even in a heavy usage household, right now it’s likely you’d struggle to 
generate the need for anything close to 1Gbps – if you had five 4K TVs 
streaming 4K movies simultaneously then that’s only around 100Mbps being 
consumed – leaving 900Mbps idle.

Given that the vast majority of current online video viewing is in SD or HD – 
requiring only 2Mbps-5Mbps then a 1Gbps pipe would be enough to stream 200 HD 
streams simultaneously – way, way beyond the requirements of a normal household.

Cost is the key .. (snip)

Markets like Hong Kong, South Korea and Japan started their deployment of 
high-speed broadband in the late 1990s and having fully recouped their 
investments in delivering FTTB with VDSL – typically offering up to 100Mbps – 
are now delivering 1Gbps and even 10Gbps via FTTP.

For a variety of reasons, our broadband upgrade in Australia started much 
later, so we cannot judge ourselves against markets like these; they are much 
further along on their journey and you just can’t compare Australia to 
Singapore or Hong Kong for obvious reasons including those stated above.

This is why operators around the world are so excited about technologies like 
DOCSIS 3.1 and G.fast, which allow Gigabit broadband to be deployed at 
substantially lower price points and in far less time than it takes to deploy 
Gigabit services over FTTP – and we will see both of these technologies emerge 
much more fully in the next few years globally as well as here in Australia.

Conclusion

We know that people in Australia want access to fast internet – that is 
precisely what we are aiming to deliver with the nbn™ network.

We also know that 1Gbps speeds are simply way beyond what even the most 
advanced end-user needs today, let alone what is needed by regular families 
across Australia.

There is literally not a single mass market consumer application – or even a 
combination of applications – that requires 1Gbps capability right now.

This will change in the future, especially as augmented reality, artificial 
intelligence, 8K technology and virtual reality penetrate our daily lives.

In fact, we hope that by delivering a fully connected continent we can help 
create a market for Gigabit applications – and when Australians need those 
kinds of speeds we will have the solutions in place to provide it.

--

Cheers,
Stephen

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