| Issue:
23/08 |
ATUG
NBN Forums and Submission
|
June
18,
2008
|
ATUG’s
approach to NBN Regulatory Issues – Discussions
with members June 2008 on the key issues and high level principles
will be put forward to Government seeking appropriate legislative
amendments. We have held two meetings, Melbourne and Adelaide, to
date. Meetings in Sydney and Queensland will be held tomorrow on
the
19th of June,
the Western
Australian meeting will be held on the 24th. Please click
here for more information.
ATUG are interested to hear your feedback and will be using it to
formulate the submission to the government. Please email any feedback
to rosemary.sinclair@atug.org.au
Policy Objective for the new Legislation
Long-term interests of end users remains the objective to telecommunications
policy in Australia, especially policy designed to encourage accelerated
and extended investment in next generation broadband networks.
Affordability
Next Generation broadband will not achieve the right outcomes for
Australia if end users cannot afford to pay for it.
Discussion Points
• Ways of reducing build costs; carrier powers and immunities; access
to physical infrastructure; infrastructure sharing
| |
o
Maximum opportunity should be taken to utilise existing physical
infrastructure, eg, towers, poles, pits, ducts, on an “equitable” basis
so as to reduce cost and environmental impact.
o For example
in the case of the overhead cable option, (whereby new technology,
non metallic cable can be erected beside electrical conductors)
legislation must make carriers exempt from local government
planning laws for this specific activity.
o A code
of practice to address construction practises should be developed
by Communications Alliance and registered with and compliance
monitored by the Australia Communications and Media Authority. |
• Availability
of an entry level package, as exists with the Australian Broadband
Guarantee, to ensure all end
users can afford
to connect to the NBN
• Pricing should reflect real costs of construction, fair returns for
private investors and government
Choice
Competition remains a key outcome for ATUG. Where possible, infrastructure
competition is preferred. Where this is not possible service competition
is preferable to monopoly.
Discussion points
•
Structural separation – separate ownership
•
Functional separation – separate structures, processes, management
teams, incentives under common corporate ownership
•
How to achieve wholesale service equivalence – price, non-price.
a comprehensive set of “service equivalence” industry
rules must be established by an Independent Body
•
How to achieve industry “tolerance” and effective self-regulation
of advocacy
• The Trade Practices Act should be the vehicle. It already requires
the ACCC to take account of the risk of new investment in setting
access prices and has provisions for access and anti-competitive
conduct
• Compliance with the Rules by both providers and seekers must be monitored
independently and enforced by the Regulator.
Oversight
Body – NBN
Australia
ATUG sees the increased level of disputes and the increased use
of legal process to delay outcomes as evidence that industry processes
are not working and that ACCC processes reflect a philosophy suitable
in 1997 but self-evidently not workable in 2008. The migration task
associated with the roll-out and cut-over of all broadband users
to the NBN is a huge project requiring commitment over many years.
The implementation of processes to support effective of functional
separation is a preliminary task requiring industry co-operation
which has not been seen for some years.
Discussion Points
• Can industry-based, independent monitoring of competitive behaviour
be established to mitigate the risk of non-price anti-competitive
behaviour especially to timeliness of outcomes?
• Could this body be a required step ahead of arbitration and litigation?
• What role should the ACCC have in this body?
• What role should end users have in this body?
NBN Customer Experience
End users need more information on speeds as broadband becomes more
integral to working and living. Customer service and switching processes
for broadband services need to be updated. Migration plans for NBN
implementation need to take account of end user needs at the beginning
and not require Ministerial intervention as happened with CDMA switch
off.
Discussion Points
Customer Migration
o Legislation
should require the establishment of an Industry Code of Practice
to set out rules and processes for the fair and reasonable
transfer of a customer from one provider to another provider.
Customer Information
o Legislation
should require the establishment of a “Framework” for
the presentation of a minimum set of standardised customer focused
data describing the characteristics of a particular service and the
speed performance delivery standards.
Rules Compliance
o Legislation must require all industry participants to enter into
a formal legal agreement with the appropriate Industry Regulators
to comply with applicable Industry Rules and Codes of Practice.
Ubiquity of Australia’s NBN
ATUG believes all Australians, wherever they are, should have access
to the NBN minimum service at affordable prices. The real benefit
of the NBN will not be achieved unless ALL Australians can be connected.
The transformation of business, government and community services
and activities that could be possible with Next Generation Broadband
cannot be achieved without ubiquitous coverage.
Discussion Points
• An entry level product should be available to ensure all end users
can connect to the NBN
•
Should the USO be extended to include broadband – an Australian
Communications Guarantee including Voice* and Broadband (Voice* means
Voice and Voice Equivalent services)
• Government funding for USO services is preferable to industry based
cross subsidy schemes
•
Does the emergency service obligation apply to FTTx builds – what
are the cost implications?
•
Spectrum for broadband in regional and remote areas – timeliness,
cost
• The ABG will be need to be funded sufficiently to provide coverage
until NBN services are available
Background to NBN Regulatory discussions
From ATUG Report to Members December 2007
Fibre to the Node
Discussions in early 2007 between the ACCC and Telstra (ahead of
public consultation on a Proposed Undertaking by Telstra in regard
to access to the FTTN for competitors) stalled over the cross subsidy
for regional services to fund the Universal Service Obligation
which in Telstra’s view is not adequately funded by industry.
Telstra sought $13.63 per month to cover the cross subsidy. The
ACCC was prepared to allow $1.77 per month in the access price
for competitors. Funding the USO/regional services has been a key
feature of all Telstra’s regulatory activity recently – including
its position on ULL pricing. The quoted wholesale price of $85
per month is arrived at by calculating existing margin returns
rather than assessing true costs. This tendency to monopoly rather
than competitive pricing is the reason a new FTTN service would
have to be subject to price regulation. The debate needs to be
broadened to Fibre to the Premises and the regulatory framework
adopted or adapted will need to ensure affordable services are
delivered to end users. Industry focus is still on speeds rather
than affordability.
Functional Separation
Around the world regulation is increasingly focused on key bottlenecks
using less but more targeted regulatory tools. One of these tools
is Functional Separation which allows for investment certainty
for all players while promoting continued competition. Functional
separation allows regulators to intervene in persistent bottleneck
markets where non-discriminatory behaviour cannot be ensured by
other remedies. Functional separation has spurred investment in
unbundled access lines in the UK with continued increases in market
valuation for BT. It is clear that market size in Australia must
be taken into account in return on investment and pricing calculations.
In 1990’s ATUG’s strong preference was for separated
Network and Service Companies. In 2008 Functional Separation provides
the tool to achieve this outcome in the new era of significant
network upgrade to fibre to the premises.
Operational Separation
The Australian model was been introduced on the basis of the Minister
accepting Telstra’s Operational Separation Plan and its sub
components of Price Equivalence, Service Quality, Information Security,
Customer Responsiveness, Information Security (to be published).
The ACCC has published its Retail Pricing Protocol to advise how
it assesses potentially anti-competitive behaviour in telecommunications
markets, and its views on the concept of 'price equivalence' which
is an important element of the operational separation of Telstra.
Consultation with industry and end users was via submissions to
Telstra. This framework will be reviewed in 2008.
Broadband Speeds
Broadband speed is an emerging issue for end users as applications
become more viable and relevant e.g., Voice over IP. ATUG’s
policy is all Australian users should have affordable, multi-megabit
symmetrical broadband access. Industry developments in the last
months of 2006 which saw increased speeds on offer more broadly
were welcome. Also of interest is the ACCC’s position that
excessive claims of speed by network service providers can be misleading
in a Trade Practices Act sense. Operators will need to delineate
the whole range of parameters that dictate the likely speeds the
customers will obtain for fixed line or mobile data services. It
is not enough for service providers to make ‘blanket claims’ that
customers will get speeds ‘up to’ a certain threshold
when significant limitations apply to the attainment of those speeds.
This issue is on the radar for regulators in many countries.
Long-term interests of end users
2007 has seen continued effort to change the core objective of telecommunications
policy from the “long-term interests of end users” to
the interests of shareholders and investors. This debate will continue
through 2008 and will be a key focus of the review of telecommunications
policy in 2008/2009. The ACCC’s regulatory role is to strike
a balance between ensuring that investors (taking account of their
risks) are not discouraged from undertaking new efficient investment,
at the same time, however, ensuring that consumers obtain the benefit
of competition. ATUG will continue to emphasise that the core objective
of communications policy and regulation must be the long-term interests
of end users.
Future Forums Outcomes
During 2007 as well as campaigning for competition, ATUG was very
focused on the future ahead for end users and the communications
industry.
The Demand Forum
Highlighted the
need for a range of broadband speeds and pricing plans “fit for purpose”.
Many end users
are on a journey with broadband.
Building their understanding of value.
They do not want to be presented with very high speed but unaffordable
broadband services, which have more bang than their wallets have
bucks.
Just as important for end users right now are proper plans where
what you see in the ad is actually what you get;
A market where
switching broadband providers is as seamless as switching mobile
providers.
And for business
users;
A market where broadband availability is ubiquitous and quality
is consistent.
End user confidence emerged as a key issue as the economy in all
sectors looks to transform just about all transactions and processes
based on the new connectivity.
“Any to any connectivity” and “always on” are
shared visions BUT the need for speed and the ability to pay is specific
to each user.
The Technology Forum
Came to the conclusion
that fibre to the home/farm/business is the future for the fixed
network.
BUT to meet market
demands for affordable, ubiquitous, high and (sometimes low speed)
broadband.
and to deal with the distance/density issues in Australia, wireless
services have an important role to play.
AND over time,
just as voice services have become mobile, so will broadband services – for
that segment of the market which is happy to pay the mobile premium
for convenience.
The geography of Australia will mean satellites will also be an
important part of the future technology landscape.
End users are
really not interested in the technical specification of the underlying
platforms and don’t approach
this debate with any ideological predisposition to one platform
or another.
The new world
is an “Internet of Things”
And the need for IPv6 and the migration issues associated with such
a huge change were highlighted.
The role of the SMART GRID rather than just the Smart Meter may
provide the basis for increased infrastructure competition, but will require co-operation at unprecedented levels between Federal
and State Governments through COAG and such processes, and with the
private sector.
And the Forum felt access to competitive backhaul capacity within
Australia and internationally will become more urgent in the next
few years as content becomes richer and information flows more symmetrical.
The Investment Forum
Came at a point in the cycle of Forums, when Australia had just
had an election with broadband a key issue.
The forum discussion focused on the rise and rise of social networking,
better online content, smarter personal devices and the thinking
by business and government about forms of Enterprise 2.0 or Agency
2.0 based on Web 2.0 technologies.
Businesses
are seeing the move to digital business “net” based
working as critical to mission and hence on the investment radar.
ATUG itself is
exploring Web 2.0 working as a way of meeting members’ needs
for information including direct international updates from experts.
Telco land is
exploring new models of investment – including
public/private partnerships and how these can be effectively structured
to achieve the multiple objectives that underpin them.
PPPs are about
risk management – an issue exercising
the minds of many in Canberra no doubt.
New business models in the construction, operation end of the market
are being matched with new business models in the content, applications
end of the market.
And all this
innovation is taking place in a privately funded market where shareholder
expectations are an important consideration – albeit
not the only consideration as the High Court has reminded us.
Broadband has to be affordable as well as available for end users
and Australia as a whole to reap the benefits of this new economic
and community infrastructure.
The Policy and Regulation Forum
Was
more focused on FTTH developments and supporting regulatory frameworks.
Around the world
two sets of issues are emerging –
• where
incumbents build the FTTH networks, the issues are access to the
switching network and fibre plant
unbundling and the
pricing of access;
• where
competitors build the FTTH networks, the issues crystallize around
over-build.
The characteristics
of countries that are successfully deploying fibre include:
• Government
regulatory commitment;
• strong user demand and
• a competitive broadband market.
A number of countries
are exploring “functional separation” as
a way of dealing more efficiently and effectively with bottleneck
infrastructure, meaning
effectively competitive sectors can be left to market forces.
Beyond the “fibre build” debate,
there remain some big policy questions arising from:
• the merging
of the telephony and internet worlds;
• the development
of behavioral economics as a way of understanding the role of
consumers as effective market
participants;
• the need
to reduce unnecessary regulation on economic activity;
• scarce
resources such as spectrum becoming more abundant because of technology
developments;
• the need
to re-think Universal Service from an Obligation on industry to
a Safety Net Guarantee from Government.
Minister’s request for submissions on regulatory issues associated
with the National Broadband Network
The Minister for Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy,
invited industry and public interest groups to provide submissions
on regulatory issues associated with the National Broadband Network.
The Government today issued a Request for Proposals (RFP) to facilitate
the roll-out of the National Broadband Network that will deliver
minimum speeds of 12 megabits per second to 98% of Australian homes
and businesses.
“
In addition to an investment of up to $4.7 billion, the Government
is prepared to consider changes to existing telecommunications regulations,
to facilitate the roll-out of the National Broadband Network,” Senator
Conroy said.
“ We recognise the critical importance of future telecommunications
regulatory settings, including ongoing consumer safeguards, to ensure
the best outcomes for all Australians and the competitiveness of
the economy.”
The submissions will be due one month prior to the closing date for
National Broadband Network proposals. All regulatory submissions
will be made available to National Broadband Network proponents,
to assist in the development of proposals. The Panel of Experts,
who will be assessing the proposals, will also be able to consider
these submissions before making its recommendation to Government.
The Government will make submissions publicly available, but reserves
the right to not publish submissions or parts of submissions where
it considers it appropriate to do so for confidentiality or other
reasons.
Submissions must be received by 3.00pm AEST 25 June 2008. All submissions
are to be provided to regulatory@dbcde.gov.au