Red Alert

The future highway is more than we think

Posted by Clare Curran on October 12th, 2009

I’ve been thinking a lot about broadband. Don’t switch off, keep reading because it’s more important than you might think.

We all want faster and better internet connections, but broadband is so much more than that. It’s New Zealand’s future. For the delivery of voice services yes. But there’s so much more to it.

Health, education, energy and media services are all likely to come via that new highway sooner than we think. But only if the government takes charge of it and makes sure there is public investment in the sort of sort of services that will benefit the majority of New Zealanders, and in how they will be delivered equitably.

Because the industry cannot and will not deliver the services on its own.

The advent of convergence across broadcasting and all our media is taking telecommunications out of its comfort zone.

The reality is, delivering broadband to New Zealand homes, business, schools and hospitals is not just about voice and internet services.

It’s about infrastructure, core infrastructure, that will enable other services to converge via the fibre. Of course broadband is not just fibre. It’s also  wireless and satellite services. But fibre means energy services can be delivered to your home and your smart meter (if we get the right ones) will be able to regulate your appliances to save power and keep your house running.

And we can deliver a range of social services  via broadband that will benefit our country socially and economically and transform our society. But it’ll take vision, leadership and public investment. Not just at the base infrastructure level. Which is where we’re at right now.

There are also huge potential environmental benefits both through Teleworking and real-time environmental monitoring.

The benefits for agriculture are enormous too, think about every farm being directly connected to our RS&T system. The list goes on.

Respected telecommunications analyst Paul Budde puts it like this:

In order to make this work, the government – being the linchpin in most of these sectors – will now have to make a firm commitment to sectors such as healthcare, and applications such as smart grids, using this infrastructure… it’s not just about high-speed internet… industry leadership will be a crucial factor in moving telecoms beyond telephony and broadband access.

I think the Ministry of Economic Development gets that. It’s still a bit hard to tell because despite all the announcements in recent weeks, there’s still quite a few questions that are unanswered. And I’m not sure that they’ll be able to do a lot more than pay lip service to these aims in the short term. But I have some hopes.

But I’m yet to see any signals that the government really understands what’s at stake.

Worryingly, I don’t think Treasury gets it. Just as worryingly, Telecom doesn’t get it. And that’s a big pity. Telecom is our biggest telco, it’s got a national network providing land-line telephone services to all New Zealanders. It also provides internet and mobile services. It’s been rolling out broadband.

But it appears to see itself and its future (short term because I don’t think Telecom is really thinking long term) as trying to maintain its market share as a telco.

And I say, it’s time to think outside the square, Telecom.

I think there are a range of other companies, utilities, not traditionally part of the telecommunications industry who are able to see a bigger picture and a bigger future where broadband is a vehicle. It’s not the end game.

I hope the government is able to do that too.


6 Responses to “The future highway is more than we think”

  1. rainman says:

    “But fibre means energy services can be delivered to your home”

    What energy services do you mean?

  2. Spud says:

    Good on you Clare for bringing this up, I couldn’t agree more. @>–>–

  3. Draco T Bastard says:

    It almost seemed that you had finally got it…

    and then I read the last few paragraphs and realised you’re still stuck in the neo-classical delusion of competition.

  4. Andy Linton says:

    Here’s some stuff from a report targeted on the US – would our percentages be the same?

    SMART 2020: Enabling the low carbon economy in the information age

    Altogether, ICT enabled solutions could cut annual CO2 emissions in the U.S. by 13–22% from business-as-usual projections for 2020. This translates to gross energy and fuel savings of $140-240 billion dollars.

    A Smart Grid built on better information and communication could reduce CO2 emissions by 230–480 MMT of CO2, and save $15–35 billion in energy and fuel costs.

    Travel Substitution through virtual meetings and flexible work arrangements could
    reduce CO2 by 70–130 MMT and save $20–40 billion.

    You can read it here:

    http://www.theclimategroup.org/assets/resources/publications/Smart2020UnitedStatesReportAddendumSummary.pdf

    Also see:

    http://www.smart2020.org/
    http://www.speedmatters.org/page/-/SPEEDMATTERS/Publications/CWA_Benefits_of_Broadband.pdf?nocdn=1

  5. [...] down the track. Have we reached that point? And is it in New Zealand’s interest? Because, as I’ve said several times already, broadband is core infrastructure, it’s so much more than faster internet [...]

  6. Vedezevanje says:

    Enjoy your blog. Sending best wishes from Paris.

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