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Collective amnesia grips industry.
Optus took aim at months of "ill-informed debate" over
wireless and fibre infrastructure, criticising policy makers and
sections of the telecommunications industry alike for their
"collective amnesia" when shaping Australia's broadband
future.
In a significant deviation from the CommsDay
Summit script - which had so far steered clear of controversy and
focused mostly on future applications - Optus director of government
and corporate affairs Maha Krishnapillai took aim at NBN critics who
he accused of failing to learn from the past.
"The
elephant in the room isn't the NBN; in fact, it's the outbreak of
collective amnesia that has gripped our industry over the past couple
of years," Krishnapillai said.
"I would love to talk
about the applications of the future rather than this but we need to
get the lessons of the past right.
"Let's at least try
and establish the facts... rather than putting [forward] speculation
and a lot of ill-informed debate from people who, frankly, should
know a hell of a lot better in terms of what's happened in our sector
in the last few years."
Several of Krishnapillai's
apparent targets were due to present at the summit later
today.
Krishnapillai addressed calls
by the Alliance for Affordable Broadband - a collective of
wireless and backhaul operators - who argue a case for
"infrastructure-based competition (rather than infrastructure
monopolies with retail competition).
"People talk about
letting infrastructure competition work. Maybe you should learn a
lesson from history," Krishnapillai said.
"We have
empirical evidence of what happened in the late nineties where Optus
rolled out a pay TV network down streets in suburban Sydney,
Melbourne and Brisbane.
"Telstra went down the same
streets, carpet-bombed the business case and effectively Optus and
Telstra wrote off over $1 billion through that period. We were losing
$300 million a year through that period at Optus.
"So for
those that are very brave to ask - and this is always interesting
when people tell other people how to spend their money - for those
who are very brave to say we should let infrastructure competition
continue, [I say] throw money into it.
"We've certainly
seen empirical evidence that that will not work and that's one of the
main reasons we support the NBN."
Krishnapillai also
mocked suggestions that wireless technologies were a suitable
alternative to fibre.
"I hear lots of things from
companies that don't even own wireless networks, let alone have
spectrum, and [from] other companies who are clearly lobbying very
hard to get government subsidies for rolling out those wireless
networks, that wireless is in fact the way forward," he
said.
"Optus has a very great faith in the future of
wireless and in its ability to offer greater broadband capability
and, in particular, mobility attached to that capability. But it will
always be a complementary service for fixed broadband.
"There
are a range of shared network issues, spectrum et cetera that will
make it a complementary service. It'll lag fibre in technical
capability over time, and it's unikely to be suited to many future
applications requiring dedicated and symmetric high capacity access
to multiple end users."
He also urged "those who
don't actually own wireless networks... to think about the reality of
93 percent-plus access to high speed broadband and what that might
look like environmentally" - a reference to the base station
density that would be required to deliver very high-speed wireless
broadband services that would be somewhere equivalent to those
capable of being realised by fibre.
Krishnapillai reserved a
special mention for critics who questioned the lifespan of fibre
architectures.
"There are still some people querying that
there's going to be some new technology that's going to replace fibre
and as recently as yesterday people saying that fibre is no longer
the technology of the future," he said.
"I'm not
exactly sure what parallel universe people live on but fibre will be
the way of the future."
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