Telstra teams up with Meralco for Gigabit Internet-over-Powerline

While the negotiations between San Miguel Corporation and telstra broke down a couple weeks ago, the Australian telecoms giant was apparently talking to another local player for a possible joint venture. The local partner is Meralco and the two are planning to put up a telecoms service, primarily mobile internet and broadband, by end of August 2016.

The joint-venture will harness the existing infrastructure of Meralco and use existing powerlines to distribute mobile and internet services across the Philippines.

“Meralco is in the better position to roll-out wireless service and broadband internet to the Filipino consumers due to its massive distribution network already in place”, according to Andy Penn, Telstra CEO.

The initial roll-out will include Gigabit internet to the home using the same power lines currently running from the NGCP (National Grid Corporation of the Philippines) towers down to the electric poles of baranggays and subdivisions.

That means all residential areas currently hooked up to Meralco can sign up for the Gigabit internet almost immediately.

A Spark lightbulb with built-in WiFi router will be provided for each new subscription. All the subscriber needs to do is plug it to any existing socket in the house and Gigabit WiFi will be immediately activated. An additional Php1,999 per Spark bulb will be charged if a subscriber needs more bulbs for bigger houses.

All connections will be set at 1Gbps to the home but the cost will be based on the amount of bandwidth consumed. The rates will be the same as the prevailing electric rates in the respective area.

For example, in Makati the rate was Php 7.4176/kwh for February 2016. This means the rate for the Gigabit internet will also be Php7.4176/GB. If you consume 100GB a month, your internet bill will be Php741.76. Meralco is imposing this scheme since its power consumers are already familiar with the rate system for electricity and adopting the same for internet makes it easily understandable.

Initial roll-out will be in stages, starting with Makati, Pasig, Pasay, Mandaluyong, Manila and Quezon City sometime in August with the rest of Metro Manila by end of December. Meralco will be working a domestic partnership with other electric distribution companies outside of Metro Manila to be able to offer this service by 1st quarter of 2017.

Earlier this year, news broke out that the negotiations between Telstra and San Miguel have ceased due to some commercial disagreements. We made some guesses as to the reasons why here.

{Source}

The post Telstra teams up with Meralco for Gigabit Internet-over-Powerline appeared first on YugaTech | Philippines News & Tech Reviews.

Telstra says there’s no guarantee it will operate in the Philippines

Those who are still waiting for Telstra to arrive in the Philippines might not want to hold their breaths as there’s still no guarantee that it will push through.

telstra-logo

In a response to an inquiry on Twitter as to when Telstra will start their business in the Philippines, the Australian telecommunications company said that “there is no guarantee this will occur.”

telstra tweet

Back in August 2015, Telstra confirmed that it is in discussions with San Miguel Corporation (SMC) about the joint venture, but clarified that “no agreements have been reached in relation to these matters and there is no certainty that this will occur.”

The post Telstra says there’s no guarantee it will operate in the Philippines appeared first on YugaTech | Philippines News & Tech Reviews.

Telstra joins Philippine Open Exchange

Last November 11, the PHOpenIX website announced that Telstra has joined the Philippine Open Exchange. This puts Telstra as among the biggest members of the Philippine Open Internet Exchange, which currently owns EAC-C2C (which it recently acquired from Pacnet in April 2015) and co-owns APCN-2 which has a bandwidth capacity of 17.92 Tbit/s to 30.72 Tbit/s.

This development only fuels the preparation for Telstra’s entrance in the mobile network service in the Philippines which is supposed to be a partnership with San Miguel.

No other information was shared by PHOpenIX.

Also read: This excitement over Telstra might end up as a huge disappointment.

The post Telstra joins Philippine Open Exchange appeared first on YugaTech | Philippines News & Tech Reviews.

This excitement over Telstra might end up as a huge disappointment

In the last several weeks, there has been a lot of noise and positive online sentiment with Telstra’s intention to enter the Philippine mobile internet market as challenger to the duopoly of Smart and Globe.

The plan to launch in the Philippines sometime in 2016 is not yet firm but talks with San Miguel Corporation as the local partner in the joint venture has been ongoing as early as August. However, top brass of Telstra has been quoted that the Australian giant is willing to shell out as much as $1 billion to represent its 40% investment in the joint venture (by law, foreign corporations are only allowed a maximum of 40% ownership in select industries such as telecoms).

The overflowing excitement and support for Telstra is expected as many internet subscribers in the Philippines are dissatisfied with the current level of service and support they are getting from existing providers.

However, very little detail is available as to how Telstra is going to penetrate and compete against the two dominant players. Our best guess is that their service will most likely be thru a wireless network using exiting LTE technology. This is the fastest and more cost-effective way to roll-out a national broadband network in the country, considering the archipelagic nature of the Philippines.

We then also consider the track record of San Miguel which funded the establishment of Wi-Tribe back in 2007 in partnership with Q-Tel. That venture was did not quite pan out and they’ve been under rehabilitation for some time now.

Our hope is that Telstra’s venture with San Miguel Corporation will learn from the challenges of Wi-Tribe and the deficiencies of WiMax technology.

Do not expect this new ISP to offer wired broadband connection or fiber-to-the-home (FTTH) in the Philippines. The infrastructure and roll-out for that takes much longer and costlier. Do not expect gigabit-level speeds as well.

Telstra or even San Miguel for that matter does not have a stand-along infrastructure in the country. If they were quietly building one, we would have heard about it and it would have been started many years ago.

The San Miguel – Ooredoo joint venture on Liberty Telecoms will continue to operate Wi-Tribe after it exits rehabilitation. That could mean the home broadband services will continue to be offered via Wi-Tribe’s WiMax technology.

What Telstra brings to the table with the joint venture with San Miguel is the international gateway (submarine cables). One of which is the EAC-C2C (Pacnet, which was acquired by Telstra in April 2015) which lands in Cavite and Batangas, which goes all the way from Singapore up to Japan. It also co-owns APCN-2 with Singtel, Verizon, AT&T and many others which has a landing base in Batangas.

The fibre optic subsea cable network spans 36,800 km between Japan, South Korea, Hong Kong, Taiwan, the Philippines, Singapore and China. It has a design capacity of 17.92 Tbit/s to 30.72 Tbit/s to each of these landing countries. The EAC-C2C network lands at 18 cable landing stations across Asia.

That way Telstra/San Miguel will not have to buy or lease from PLDT. What San Miguel is bringing to the table is its experience (with Wi-Tribe) and of course, the 60% equivalent investment of the joint venture.

The second challenge is to build the domestic network all the way from as far as Vigan down to Naga and then connect that Batangas landing base to Palawan, Panal, Negro and Cebu and still move further down in Cagayan de Oro to Davao and Zamboanga.

That’s a pretty long fiber network. One of the longest domestic network we know of was rolled out by PLDT was the DFON (PLDT Domestic Fiber Optic Network) which spans 11,100km from Batangas to Mindoro, the Roxas to Masbate and back to Legazpi. The other is from Negros to Cebu and Leyte then down to Butuan, Cagayan de Oro and Ozamis then goes back up to Dumaguete.

Our best bet is nomadic data services and fixed wireless connection just like SmartBro or PLDT Ultera. San Miguel already owns Bell Telecommunications which applied as a mobile network operator (MNO) for January 2016. It’s possible Telstra’s invenstment will be poured into BellTel.

Bandwidth for wireless connectivity is very limited so it is easily congested. It is also prone to more external factors or interferences. We’ve already experienced really fast LTE speeds up to 42Mbps during its first few months back then but those speeds are almost non-existent nowadays.

Perhaps, if Telstra and San Miguel puts up a better infrastructure, coverage and of course, at cheaper fees and much higher bandwidth allocations.

Looking at Telstra’s mobile data plans in Australia, one can only hope that their $AUD25 (Php835) a month plan for 1GB or $AUD105 (Php3,500) for 15GB data allocation will not replicated in the Philippines. Telstra would probably price it better than that to be competitive once they launch here.

Otherwise, all these positive sentiment will only be dampen by disappointment and frustration that many Filipino internet users have been experiencing for a long time.

In any case, we welcome competition. It is good for the market and good for consumers. We remain positive and hopeful that we will really get the service we deserve, whether it’s from existing local players or new ones.

The bottom line:

* The Telstra – San Miguel joint venture is still under negotiations so a 2016 launch is still unlikely.
* The partnership is more about San Miguel which will own 60% rather than Telstra that will only own 40%.
* The joint venture will mostly be mobile data services (LTE) and not ADSL, Fiber or even cable.
* The 4th mobile network operator (MNO) could be BellTel to compete with Smart, Globe and Sun Cellular.

The post This excitement over Telstra might end up as a huge disappointment appeared first on YugaTech | Philippines News & Tech Reviews.

Telstra in Talks with San Miguel Corporation

Australian-based telecommunications company, Telstra Corporation Limited, recently confirmed that they are currently in joint-venture talks with San Miguel Corporation (SMC) for a possible investment on the conglomerate’s wireless business.

SMC’s President and Chief Operation Officer, Ramon Ang, also confirmed the on-going negotiation with Australia’s largest telecommunication company through a text message to Reuters.

Although representatives from both parties did confirm the negotiation, neither provided further details about it. However, sources claim that the discussions between the two giants have being going on for several months already prior to the recent confirmation, and it may not be long before the two companies will finally come to an agreement.

A win-win deal for both companies

In an interview conducted by Sydney Morning Herald with Sachin Gupta, Regional Head of Telecommunications Research at Nomura, Gupta said that both companies will benefit from this joint venture. “Telstra does lack emerging-market experience”, but has a wealth of experience in the telecommunications segment. San Miguel, on the other hand, “is an influential conglomerate with ample spectrum holdings, which is good, but it has a weak track record on previous telco attempts”.

Better Network Infrastructure

If this deal come to a fruition, majority of the investment that SMC will receive from Telstra will likely be used to improve its network infrastructure in the country. At least that’s ideally what they should do if they want to go up against the two dominating force in the local scene.

At the time of writing, both SMC and Telstra stated that they have not reached an agreement regarding the matter and “there is no certainty that this will occur.”

[Source]

The post Telstra in Talks with San Miguel Corporation appeared first on YugaTech | Philippines News & Tech Reviews.