https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL2203/S00056/benoit-felten-on-the-ufb-fibre-upgrade.htm
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Benoit Felten on the UFB fibre upgrade
Saturday, 19 March 2022, 11:06 am
Article: Digitl
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In late 2021 New Zealand's fibre wholesale companies
boosted standard speeds on their networks from 100mbps to
300mbps. In this guest post, Paris-based analyst Benoit
Felton puts the move into perspective:
As an
international analyst of all things broadband, I use few
examples more frequently than New Zealand when discussing
decisive and effective policy. I have followed the
development of the structural separation plans and the fibre
rollout. To see New Zealand in the top tier of every
international assessment of broadband quality is
thrilling.
In September, Chorus announced plans to upgrade
its wholesale 100 Mbps fibre connection three-fold, at no
cost to retailers. This may seem like a surprising move -
few businesses upgrade their customers for free. Yet it's an
adjustment to the evolution of broadband usage in New
Zealand.
Over the last few years, there have been several
fundamental shifts in broadband usage. Because they were
gradual, they went largely unseen. Covid prevention policies
acted as a catalyst and boosted these emerging trends. They
are now here to stay.
The changes fall into three
areas:
Working from
home
Even after Covid restrictions are
fully lifted, organisations will continue to rely on people
working from home, at least as a part-time measure. The main
consequence for customers is that their broadband connection
at home has become an absolute necessity, something they
rely on to earn a living.High speeds, low latency and
stability are vital for a majority of users. They no longer
simply for a small group of early adopters.
Online
learning
Similarly, while aspects of home schooling
will disappear as restrictions lift, online learning
is here to stay.Lockdowns have taught schools,
teachers, and education authorities that better online
resources at home could improve education. This means
interaction (between students, teachers or external
contributors), video consumption, and cloud-based resources.
These uses are similar to what people need to work from
home. School related uses may now happen concurrently to
parents’ work from home needs, meaning that a single
user’s needs no longer determine the broadband
requirement.
Video
communication
Video-communication has become an
everyday tool. During the lockdown, many people who had
never made a video-call, particularly among the older
segments of the population, learned to use it and realised
how important and easy it was. Video-communication usage
skyrocketed during lockdown and is still at its highest
post-lockdown in many countries.From a broadband service
point of view, these fundamental changes have several
consequences worth noting:
- Broadband usage
has gone up across the board. Users that could be considered
casual pre-Covid now have similar usage patterns as heavy
users. Users are more frequently saturating their connection
and feeling its limitations.
- The perceived
quality of broadband is no longer solely about download
speeds but also about upload speeds. As more users focus on
real-time video services and cloud workspaces, the upload
performance becomes a vital component of a decent broadband
solution.
- Availability and stability are
becoming critical aspects of a good broadband connection.
Users are more mature and understand that just because a
broadband service performs well at one point in time doesn't
mean it will perform well all the time, particularly at peak
viewing hours in the evening.
Fibre has
few direct competitors
As an outsider looking in,
it’s hard to understand why consumers would accept
alternatives to fibre where it is available. Few other
technology solutions can boast speeds at or above 300 Mbps
consistently, and all are constrained either by limitations
of the technology, lack of maturity or
economics:
- Satellite solutions such as the
ones launched by Space X (Starlink) or planned by Telesat
and OneWeb can deliver speeds around 100 Mbps downstream.
Yet they are heavily constrained with upload speeds (around
15Mbps). At the moment, this technology comes with a heavy
price tag.
- 4G fixed wireless solutions to the
home struggle to deliver download speeds above 70Mbps with
the Commerce Commission reporting the average being only
32.7 Mbps. Elsewhere in the world, fixed wireless is
deployed where fibre is not available, not as a competing
solution. The
main reason is that from a performance perspective it cannot
compete with fibre to the home, on speed or stability.
It’s no mystery therefore that New Zealand providers are
not meeting their fixed wireless targets.
- 5G
fixed wireless access can theoretically deliver higher
speeds, but over much shorter distances which means, to
enhance the customer experience, many more base stations
than currently exist are needed. There are concerns in the
industry that there may not be a strong economic case for
deploying so many, and currently no one has demonstrated its
success. Japanese company Rakuten is rumoured to be the most
advanced in deploying such a dense fixed wireless network,
but the complicated overall financial situation of the
company makes it hard to assess any success in this respect.
Pushing for 5G FWA deployment when open access fibre is
available to 87 percent of New Zealand seems
absurd.
Leverage gigabit
broadband
New Zealand should leverage its gigabit
head start. Fibre to the home not only delivers the speeds
needed by the evolution in usage, it’s also the simplest
medium to do so. It is already largely deployed, needing
only a home installation to be ready. It allows for open
access competition under the structural separation regime in
place in New Zealand and it has plenty of space for future
upgrades in speeds, not only 1 Gbps, but way beyond: most
fibre company networks are already 10 Gbps-ready in New
Zealand and 25 Gbps is just a technical upgrade
away.Chorus' free fibre upgrade is a savvy response to
the evolution in usage we have seen since the pandemic. The
choices made by government a decade ago made this possible.
This upgrade furthers that. In ten years, New Zealand has
joined the best in the world. It offers fast and affordable
broadband to its citizens. This new step up in performance
will only reinforce that leadership position.
Felton
refers to Chorus here. Since September
the other fibre wholesale companies have rolled out similar
speed upgrades.
Benoit Felten on the UFB fibre upgrade
was first posted at
billbennett.co.nz.
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