Newsletter:

Skip Navigation LinksHome > News > Telecommunications > Separating Telstra not the answer

Separating Telstra not the answer

By Lilia Guan
7 July 2008 04:00PM
Tags: telstra

Telecommunications analyst group Ovum believes separating Telstra could hinder and hurt the Australian telecommunications industry.

Naïve approaches to the issue of Telstra's separation could do serious damage to the Australian telecommunications industry, according to David Kennedy, Research Director at Ovum.

According to Kennedy, British Telecom's separation of its access network and wholesale division back in 2005 has paved the way for subsequent seperations, most recently witnessed with Telecom New Zealand.

“Ovum’s view is that separation is always a local solution to local problems. And it is not essential to success. France, for example, hasn’t adopted separation as policy, but it is a fibre-to-the-home (FTTH) leader in Europe,” he said.

Kennedy claimed that overseas policies cannot simply be copied into the Australian market, which has many significant differences to the UK and New Zealand. Operational separation might be implemented in Australia, but before that could happen a lot a hard work would need to be done to identify the right approach, he said.

“The reality is that we haven’t even begun to do this work. It’s important to remember that operational separation also has costs. When the New Zealand Government announced its 2006 package of reforms, which included operational separation, Telecom New Zealand’s share price dropped around 30 percent,” he said.

Kenneday cautioned that separation made a major contribution to that drop, and it is too early to say whether the cost of separation will generate compensating benefits.

“If we saw a similar drop in Australia, it would crimp Telstra’s capacity to invest in new networks and technologies,” he said.

Kennedy believes this could have the perverse effect of delaying investment in new broadband infrastructure and that these are the kinds of factors that a separation policy would need to take into account.

   


Ads by Google


Thoughts on this article? Add a comment below.
Comments: 7
The issue of Structural Separation is not about Telstra - it is about the recipient of $4.7B of government funding.

We should not be getting swayed by the potential minor and temporary effect of share pricing on an entity (Telstra or other) that receives a large amount of *investment*. In fact, surely, whoever does win the $4.7B NBN tender will have a fairly good outlook from a share-price and investment perspective.

iTnews - comments icon Posted by TooManyAssumptionsJul 7, 2008 6:05 PM
With the short sighted sale of Telstra, the greatest opportunity to inject Australia into the Digital Age was lost.

Now it is just another money hungry investment style company, that is more concerned with profit than servicing the Australian Public.


iTnews - comments icon Posted by RudiJul 7, 2008 6:50 PM
What we need for the new NBN is "True competition". Not the over regulated stuff OPTUS has come to love under the previous Government. Separating Telstra would only be beneficial to Singtel/Optus and would discourage investment and hinder the building of this new NBN. Ultimately this will harm all Australians.

Telstra has been quoted as saying the new network will be "open access" so I fail to see why they Singtel/Optus are scared of "True Competition"

iTnews - comments icon Posted by allanJul 8, 2008 8:06 AM
allan, what Telstra has been quoted as saying about the future and what Telstra has been seen to do in the past & present are not the same.

Separating the Telstra monolith into completely independent infrastructure and retail entities would potentially facilitate competition, while increasing shareholder value.

While any retailer controls any part of the infrastructure, Australia will never have true competition in retail telecommunications.

iTnews - comments icon Posted by DavidBJul 8, 2008 10:05 AM
This article really should mention that Telstra is an Ovum client. See http://www.ovum.com/about/clients/
iTnews - comments icon Posted by Danny YeeJul 8, 2008 10:58 AM
http://www.ovum.com/about/clients/

I think there may be some bias here.

iTnews - comments icon Posted by BenJul 8, 2008 11:10 AM
Telstra should not have been sold in its current form; splitting the monopoly telco should have been done in 1998 when the first of the sales started to gain momentum.

The idiotic government of the time (a Liberal one) decided to sell off the whole problem, only to have a much bigger headache at the end.

Remember back around 1995 when Telstra actually split itself into three? Well they did and the telecoms cabling and exchanges were all given to EDC to look after. This lasted for about 3 years UNTIL just before they were to be made public - then it all got reintegrated....

So - Telstra was actually separated for a while back and there was still mass-investment in telecoms. Their whole argument can be proven time and time again as a big, hairy, two-faced lie.


Separation is the only way to make communications infrastructure cheaper in Australia; there isn't the population to support two or three sets of in-ground last-mile cabling!

If access to cabling is provided at a universal rate, with ownership of that cable being for the common good of all, competition will explode in Australia!

Narrow-minded likes at Telstra don't want this, as it takes their revenue stream from ISP's away completely. Telstra have fought hard to muddy the separation waters, even though there is a wealth of fact behind the positives behind taking this action.

Mr Prime Minister - I voted you in to deliver better services to our community. Break out the cleaver and chop Telstra in half!

iTnews - comments icon Posted by Chris FordJul 8, 2008 3:19 PM
Report this comment as offensive:

   * Indicates information we require to process your submission.

Name: *
Email: *
Reason for offense: *
Your report will not be displayed.  
Name:
*
 
Email:
(will not be displayed)
*
 
Comment:
(HTML not permitted)
*
 
Validation
*

Enter the code you see below:

 

 
 
 
 
 




Product Reviews now available on iTnews.com.au

TopTopics
(9156) -  researchers
(6641) -  intel
(6420) -  processor
(6282) -  second
(6208) -  thermodynamics
(6027) -  telstra
(4057) -  network
(3378) -  broadband
(2955) -  microsoft
(2586) -  apple
(2417) -  samsung
(2326) -  nbn
(2323) -  wifi
(1911) -  iphone
(1389) -  security