NBN throws AU$700 million at hooking up 700,000 businesses with fibre

By Chris Duckett | September 21, 2020
https://www.zdnet.com/article/nbn-throws-au700-million-at-hooking-up-700000-businesses-with-fibre/


The company responsible for the National Broadband Network (NBN) announced on 
Tuesday it was spending AU$700 million to create 240 "business fibre zones" 
that will cover 700,000 business premises.

Being part of a zone will allow businesses to get a full fibre Enterprise 
Ethernet connection, as well as reduced rates and connection fees.

NBN added that when it connects a business within a zone to fibre, it will not 
charge the business for the act, and if the business signs a 3-year deal, NBN 
will not charge the internet service provider.

"Enterprise Ethernet is NBN Co's fastest symmetrical wholesale product and 
premium-grade business offering. It has options for prioritised traffic, high 
capacity, and symmetrical upload and download wholesale speeds from 10Mbps to 
close to 1Gbps, as well as enhanced 24/7 support through the business NBN 
operations centre with a dedicated team located in Australia," the company said 
in a statement.

Of the 240 zones to be created, 85 will be regional centres, while another 14 
will be allocated "specifically to underpin existing health precincts".

An initial 130 zones were released on Tuesday, with 61 in the regional centres 
and 11 in health precincts.

"Having helped level the playing field for residential internet services with 
the rollout of the NBN network, we are now turning our attention to 
accessibility for our premium-grade business services, helping businesses in 
regional areas access the benefits of competition, enhanced broadband support 
services, and better wholesale NBN prices for the digital services they need to 
succeed," NBN CEO Stephen Rue said.

"For the first time, any business in an NBN business fibre zone can get the 
same premium-grade services and the same wholesale prices as those in the 
centre of our biggest cities."

The company has also set aside AU$50 million to "work with local councils and 
state and territory governments" across three years to extend its 
business-service footprint outside the designated zones.


Within NSW metro, the initial fibre zones will be in Botany, Gosford, Lake 
Haven -- Wyong, Lane Cove, Mosman, Neutral Bay, Parramatta, Randwick, 
Marrickville, Double Bay -- Rose Bay, and an amorphous Central Coast zone.

In regional NSW, the zones will be created in Albury / Lavington, Armidale, 
Ballina, Batemans Bay, Bathurst, Charlestown, Coffs Harbour, Corrimal -- 
Austinmer, Dubbo, Goulburn, Lismore, Maitland, Mudgee, Newcastle CBD, Nowra, 
Orange, Port Kembla -- Warrawong, Port Macquarie, Tamworth, Taree, Wagga Wagga, 
Wollongong, and Shoalhaven.

For Victorian metro, the zones are Berwick South, Box Hill, Clayton, 
Collingwood, Dandenong, Mornington, Springvale -- Noble Park, Burwood, 
Chadstone -- Oakleigh, Caulfield -- Carnegie, St Kilda -- Elsternwick, 
Blackburn -- Mitcham, and Richmond -- Hawthorn.

Elsewhere in Victoria, the zones are Ararat, Ballarat, Bendigo, Echuca, 
Geelong, Horsham, Mildura, Shepparton, Wangaratta, Warrnambool, Wodonga, and 
Morwell -- Traralgon.

Around Brisbane, the zones are in Annerley, Archerfield, Coorparoo, Darra - 
Richlands, Eagle Farm, Mount Gravatt, Stafford -- Alderley, Tingalpa, 
Morningside -- Lytton, and Indooroopilly -- Toowong.

For the rest of Queensland, Bundaberg, Caloundra, Gladstone, Gympie, Mackay, 
Maroochydore, Maryborough, Rockhampton, Southport, Toowoomba, Townsville area, 
Wurtulla -- Birtinya, and Cairns -- Port Douglas will have fibre zones.

Tasmania will have zones in Burnie, Devonport, Hobart, and Launceston.

Over in Perth, the zones are Balcatta, Bassendean, Canning Vale -- Riverton, 
Fremantle, Henderson, Malaga, Mandurah, Midland -- Guildford, O'Connor -- 
Murdoch, Osborne Park Industrial, Rockingham, Subiaco -- Nedlands -- Shenton 
Park, Wangara, South Perth, Bibra Lake -- Coogee, Applecross -- Melville, and 
Belmont -- Cannington.

For the rest of WA, there will be four zones across Albany, Bunbury, Busselton, 
and Geraldton.

While in Adelaide, the zones will be Edinburgh, Hawthorn -- Malvern, Hindmarsh, 
Lonsdale, Melrose Park, Mount Barker, Norwood, Port Adelaide -- Gepps Cross, 
Prospect area, Richmond, Toorak Gardens, Unley -- Parkside, Woodville Park, and 
Willunga.

Outside of South Australian metro area, Mount Gambier is the sole business 
fibre zone.

Canberra gets zones in Belconnen, Canberra CBD, Deakin, and Phillip, while NBN 
has allocated a zone called Queanbeyan – Hume to an area dubbed "ACT regional".

The Northern Territory gets three zones in Darwin, Palmerston, and Casuarina.


When the zones scheme is completed, it is expected 90% of businesses within the 
NBN footprint will be able to have a fibre connection.

"This initiative will create more jobs as we combat the impact of COVID-19 on 
our economy and employment across our country. The construction of the business 
fibre zones will deliver up to 6,000 new jobs by 2021-22, including more 
engineers, project managers, and construction crew," Finance Minister Mathias 
Cormann said.

"It will also boost the productivity of businesses within each of the 240 
business fibre zones."

As for Labor, Shadow Communications Minister Michelle Rowland criticised the 
decision.

"After spending AU$51 billion on a second-rate network, and a decade critising 
Labor, it turns out fibre was better all along," Rowland said.

"Today confirms the Liberals don't have a clue when it comes to technology or 
economics. Their only motivation is the politics of the moment and Australians 
have lost out."

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