NBN cost could rise on ACCC ruling: reportThe construction cost of the national broadband network could rise by as much as $2 billion dollars under proposed new prices for telcos that use Telstra Corporation Ltd's fixed-line assets, according to The Australian Financial Review.
The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) released draft access and line rental prices for rival telcos that provide voice, fax and broadband products over Telstra's copper network.
Companies will be charged $20 per month to supply telephone services, down from the current $25.57 in monthly wholesale line rental for homes, and $26.93 for businesses under the new pricing regime.
The ruling means that the NBN Co may be forced to raise the price of its broadband or charge lower wholesale prices than previously forecast, the AFR reports.
"The $11 billion deal (with the NBN Co) was looking good for Telstra," RBS analyst Ian Martin told the AFR. "Maybe the NBN Co will try to negotiate it down now."
The proposed new price for line-sharing services, allowing companies to supply ADSL services, is the same as the current $2.50 per month.
The price to access Telstra's copper wire running from the telephone exchange to the home in non-CBD metropolitan areas would fall from $6.60 to $6.50.
The proposed changes are intended to apply for four years from January 1, 2011, and are now open to industry feedback.
The telco industry broadly supports the new method adopted by the competition watchdog to determine these new prices, ACCC chairman Graeme Samuel said.
"The ACCC recognises that a four-year pricing guidance period will provide a level of certainty which is essential to support commercial negotiations in the industry and to continue to support the competitive supply and rollout of telecommunications services to consumers," he said in a statement.
Optus welcomed the change in pricing methods, saying it reflects the costs Telstra actually incurs supplying services on its copper network.
However, general manager of regulatory affairs Andrew Sheridan said the change did not appear to have resulted in reductions to access charges.
"Optus will examine the detailed application of the ACCC's new methodology to understand why these price changes have not eventuated," he said.
Telstra managing director of public policy and communications David Quilty said he disagreed with the changes to monthly line rental prices.
"Telstra is committed to regulatory certainty but the draft prices would mean a 24 per cent reduction in wholesale line rental prices, which undermines price stability both now and over the long-term," he said.
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