Farmers: We need broadband for business

Broadband is a vital tool for Australia's farmers, new research has found -- with Web uptake amongst the farming community almost as high as the national average.

Broadband helps farmers deal with banks more efficiently, provides farms with a competitive advantage, streamlines selling and allows farmers to access weather updates and news, according to a report by the Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA).

Nearly all farmers with an Internet connection use it for business needs in addition to their personal needs, with only five percent having an Internet connection for personal use only, according to the survey of 2000 farmers across major agronomic areas.

Seventy-four percent of farmers surveyed had an Internet connection, according to the survey, versus 77 percent for general household residents with a landline.

However, Australia's farmers tend towards slower connections with 35 percent of farmers having broadband, overshadowed by 39 percent of farmers on dial-up.

Of the farmers with a non-broadband connection, over 80 percent said they would prefer a high-speed connection. The reason reported by 65 percent of them for not having the service was that it was not available in the area, while 16 percent thought it was too expensive.

Satellite broadband was the most popular carrier technology -- 49 percent -- with ADSL in second place at 22 percent, followed by cable (16 percent) and wireless (six percent).

The average monthly cost recorded by the survey for satellite was AU$59, for ADSL AU$37, cable AU$36 and wireless AU$33.

Internet connection aside, farmers are almost as well connected with landline and mobile services as non farm respondents, but still lower than SMEs according to the ACMA. All farmers surveyed had a landline, while 85 percent used a mobile in comparison to 87 percent of non farm respondents and 93 percent of SMEs.

"Farmers have a greater reliance on communications tools for business purposes" than non farm respondents, the report says, with nearly half of all farmers surveyed using their mobile for business as well as personal purposes.

The mobile phone has, however, not always proved a reliable communication device for farmers, with 47 percent saying that their work had taken them out of their mobile coverage area. Only 12 percent of non farm respondents had encountered no service while on work duties.

Talkback 7 comments

    Now that Opel has $1B of our money that should be fixed Anonymous -- 30/01/08

    Oh wait ... is that them running away with our money as we speak?

    And how much money was wasted on this survey?? Anonymous -- 30/01/08

    "Satellite broadband was the most popular carrier technology -- 49 percent -- with ADSL in second place at 22 percent, followed by cable (16 percent) and wireless (six percent)."

    Its not the most popular.. its all we can bloody get.. lucky to get adsl.. and 16 percent on cable.. where the hell are these farms.. in melbourne and sydney suburbs??... wtf??

    And then theres wireless.. hmm.. just like satellite.. screwed by telstra.. told to bend over and take it.. and to pay through the nose for the privelige..

    "The average monthly cost recorded by the survey for satellite was AU$59, for ADSL AU$37, cable AU$36 and wireless AU$33."

    $59.. yeah.. for maybe 500 meg usage... and wireless.. with nextg... $33.. wheres that plan..

    Seriously... was this survey actually done.. or what??

    There is a cheap solution for many Anonymous -- 30/01/08

    Not sure who knows this but an Australian company, EXTEL invented a small, cheap device designed to deliver fast adsl to isolated farms etc.

    by cheap, I'm talking only a few thousand dollars per unit which services up to 8 households - not only that, it was designed to fit into the small SCAD units which a lot of isolated areas use for telephony.

    Unfortunately for a lot of us who followed this, SCADS are telstra only, and Sol wasn't interested in letting anyone put in a device that would provide city priced adsl when he'd much rather sell us all NextG at ripoff prices.

    They called this technology "Long line ADSL", and to my knowledge, these units were warehoused indefinitely.

    Shame the government no longer have a say in what goes on with the fibre optic we all paid for.

    Reality hurts Keith no so Styles -- 30/01/08 (in reply to #320094513)

    When will people wake up to the fact that Telstra is a private company, the government recovered every cent they invested in the PMG, Telecom and Telstra since federation and as such the copper, the base stations, the fibre and the exchanges are all owned by shareholders and not by the public anymore.

    Telstra should be free to allow access to their equipment at a commercially viable rate although for some stupid reason the ACCC deems it fair to force access to much of this at unreasonably low prices to anyone who wants to call themselves a communications company, I could submit an application today and be reselling services within a month although I have no call centre staff, no people to fix lines and no billing system but that is not important because Telstra will do the complex work for me and I will only need to buy MS Office and MS Money so I can sort data, mail merge and track the billing.

    If Telstra was given free reign to change what they wanted 15 years ago you would have found most companies would have decided to build their own infrastructure rather then pick at the Telstra services that they will not invest in themselves and we would have real competition today with multiple exchanges, copper from various carriers and fibre from even more.

    Options other than telstra Anonymous -- 30/01/08

    so you are not happy with telstra - great - so why are you continually bagging then instead of asking why the other carriers will not invest in the bush? It would seem that they have done their fiscal sums and the bush is not profitable for them - unless they can use infrastructure owned by telstra to get to you - so they don't invest in bush infrastructure.

    this issue is bigger than telstra - its about access to all australians - at a reasonable priice - so why are you not putting pressure on the government to mandate that all carrier licencees invest in bush infrastructure?

    Why should the telstra shareholders bear all the burden and the other carriers send their profits off shore?? (no I do not have telstra shares and I do not work for them)

    Its an open market - and the other players dont want to invest because there is no way they can jsutify this to their shareholders, but telstra has to.

    This will never go anywhere Anonymous -- 30/01/08 (in reply to #320094542)

    You should know by now that 90% of the posts are done by people who work for or associated with the same companies who will not invest in the bush. The publishers of this site and almost all others know if they show any support towards Telstra these people will stop reading. Politicians see the stories and read the comments and think if they change policies they will lose votes. This is a very well orchestrated smear campaign that will not go away until the politicians get some courage, Telstra wins some more court cases, these publications hire people with integrity and the ACCC wakes up to how it is destroying the both the city and country.

    ADSL Anonymous -- 19/02/08

    Did you Know that a lot of the original One way sat ADSL 512 in ISDN 128K out, were converted to Two Way Satlite ADSL as the 2x phone ISDN lines were not good enough and other Two ways were installed at the lowest speed of 16kb/s less than dial up speed only because they could not get a reliable phone line for $16 p/m!!
    The lowest Next-G Wireles plan at $39 with only lowsy 200m p/m at 1.5G speed, with option to Super Fast at 400m 3Mbps at its lowest cost of $49.95, up to 3G at $109.95 and 6Mbps with 200m for $54.95 up to 3G for $114.95 p/m.
    Mind you that you can get faster than Two way sat with Next-G on only less than one bar on your mobile or modem. You dont need 5 bars.
    3 bars is considerd good signal.

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