Aussie telcos 'looking into powerline broadband'

By Jo Best, ZDNet Australia
31 October 2007 03:55 PM
Tags: utility, ull, telco, powerline, nec, local loop, broadband, bpl

Australian telcos are seriously looking at broadband over powerline (BPL), according to vendor NEC -- but interference and regulatory issues are still haunting the technology.

John Norton, executive general manager for public network solutions at NEC Australia, said the company is already in talks with some carriers over deploying BPL to provide "last mile broadband" access, but declined to name the carriers involved.

"Some of the larger [Australian] carriers are looking at it but they're not ready to make a firm commitment just yet," he said. "Some of the big European telcos, where they're having problems with ULL [unbundled local loop], showed some preliminary interest but we're right on the ground floor."

Despite a number of BPL trials undertaken by Australian energy companies Norton added that those showing an interest in broadband over powerline are telcos rather than utilities.

"The utility types are still struggling with the business model and with government policy," he said.

As well as regulatory concerns, questions remain on interference. "The interference issue still needs to be sorted. We're dealing quite closely with ACMA (the Australian Communications and Media Authority) on that," Norton noted.

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Talkback 4 comments

    BPL is old... Joker -- 31/10/07

    ...I'm waiting for them to do power over fibre!

    bpl bplguy -- 31/10/07 (in reply to #320088885)

    dont you mean fibre over power line.
    of as i put it FPL.
    if they managed even BPL without the interference they would theoretically be able to get a higher speed than the traditional ageing copper phone line network. and with the possibility of from memory around the 200mb/s so maybe 20MB/s is your lucky....

    Aussie BPL John Nemec -- 02/11/07

    Don't australians realize the intense problems BPL causes to other radio services like amateur radio. What happens in a natural disaster once the frequencies are taken by BPL interferance??? This is a huge issue in countries like the USA. Many studies show that BPL is NOT a viable thing and in fact causes alot of damage to the radio spectrum.
    Beware Australia research before implementation!

    Interferance Stuart Cameron -- 02/11/07 (in reply to #320088961)

    Not only Ham radio - but the Flying Docter service radio network will be rendered next to usless by BPL interferance. BUT who cares about anyone that lives outside of the capitals.......

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