New fibre by New Year, says Joyce
New fibre by New Year, says Joyce
by Pattrick Smellie
Aug. 3 (BusinessDesk) - Communications Minister Steven Joyce today confirmed the government's timetable for deciding who will roll out fibre-optic cable for ultra-fast broadband services.
“By October of this year I’m expecting to see Crown Fibre Holdings’ recommendations on preferred investment partners. This should enable new fibre to start going into the ground around the end of the year,” said Joyce, following confirmation by CFH that it had received 15 revised bids for the government's $1.5 billion UFB roll-out fund.
CFH
is the government entity that will partner with chosen
providers to take UFB on fibre-optic cable to 75% of the
population over the next 10 years, as long as uptake by
consumers is strong enough to allow the government funding
to be recycled several times.
Telecom Corporation
Ltd confirmed yesterday it had offered a structural
separation of its fibre unit, Chorus, and the rest of the
national telco's operations as part of a package it hopes
will allow it to participate in the roll-out. If chosen as
an investment partner, it will require 75% shareholder
approval for such a separation, which it says is
unprecedented around the world.
It expects approval
could be gained early next year, as long as the government
timetable remains on track, and is convinced its fortunes
will be better if it is part of the initiative rather than
being left out and having to compete directly with higher
cost fibre-based UFB service providers, using its existing
mixture of fibre-optic and copper cable.
CFH chair
Simon Allen said some of the 33 bidders in the first round
of indicative bids had now formed consortiums.
The
New Zealand Regional Fibre Group, led by Vector Ltd, said
late last week that it had refined its original bid
structure down to "fewer than 10" bidding parties.
The CFH process seeks bids for 33 geographic areas.
A further $350 million in government funding has also
been allocated for rural UFB roll-outs, and is subject to a
separate process, although Telecom has questioned that
approach in its latest bid to CFH.
(BusinessDesk)