Fibre no threat: ISPs still ploughing money into ADSL

Renai LeMay09 February 2010, 10:44 AM

Australian ISPs are increasing their purchases of ADSL equipment, despite the potential for the construction of the fibre-to-the-home NBN to make ADSL irrelevant.


The claims were made by ADSL equipment maker Ericsson, which is the key competitor to Alcatel. The Australian NBN chief is former CEO of Alcatel. However, Ericsson also sells fibre-optic network equipment.

“Despite the global financial crisis in 2009, our ISP customers found it necessary to keep up with demand,” said Ericsson Australia’s broadband strategy manager Colin Goodwin in a statement. “Overall ISPs actually spent around 10 per cent more on access equipment in 2009 than in 2008.”

Ericsson counts iiNet, Internode, TransACT, Primus, TSN, Netspace and Adam Internet among its Australian ISP customers.

The construction of the NBN has the potential to undercut the investments in the long term, as it will see optical fibre cables laid down streets to premises; the current ADSL infrastructure is based on copper cables.

But Goodwin said ISPs saw a strong business case for continued investments in ADSL. “In the drive for customer acquisition, there is ample time to earn a return on today’s DSL networks,” he said.

Some ISPs, the Ericsson executive added, were also investing in edge routing equipment which would support their own DSL networks, as well as connections to wholesale fibre to the premises networks — such as the NBN. iiNet, Optus, M2 Telecommunications and TransACT, for example, have all deployed Ericsson’s SmartEdge router.

Delimiter with additional reporting by Dan Warne. Image credit: Marco Soscia, royalty free


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Raindog (Senior Forumologist):

Given that NBN hasn't even managed a single connection, in real terms it remains just an expensive money pit and Conroy's fanciful pipe dream.

ADSL will be here for some time to come, the real stupidity is that this NBN proposal is too narrow to encompass integration with pre-existing technologies in order to achieve best practice and real economies throughout the nation.

09 February 2010, 11:12 AM (1 month ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Tin (Senior Forumologist):

Like Raindog says, there's still nothing to show for the NBN. It'll be years before anything happens in areas ADSL2 is of interest in, so investment in those areas is still worthwhile.

I'm expecting our town to be seeing fibre in about 6 years. That's ample time for any ADSL infrastructure to be paid off.

09 February 2010, 11:54 AM (1 month ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Halcon (Advanced member):

This is another waste of money of the many failed ventures of the ALP.
This NBN is really expensive and unsustainable to operate, yet this government push it all the way.
This government is desperate to rob money because they know nobody likes the mismanagement caused by Labour buttheads.
Kevin Rudd has Conroy as a puppet, but he does not show face when talking about IT, He probably does not know how to operate a computer.
Bring on the election and oust this ignorant party once for all!

09 February 2010, 2:29 PM (1 month ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

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