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2007 Australia - Broadband Market Statistics (tables only)

Publication Date August 2007
Publisher BuddeComm
Product Type Report
Pages 33
ISBN Number not applicable
Product Code BUD00151
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Summary

This report provides 82 statistical tables covering the Broadband Market. Statistical tables include:-

  • Subscribers
  • Market segments
  • Market Shares
  • Industry Statistics
  • Revenues
  • Forecasts

Despite the 'Mexican Standoff' between the government and Telstra on the issue of a regulatory holiday for new broadband infrastructure, broadband penetration is proceeding at high speed in Australia. By mid-2007 there were close to 4.5 million subscribers. In the residential market this means a broadband penetration of close to 64% in Internet households (46% of total households). In the business market, this figure is over 80%.

While the penetration of broadband in Australia is catching up with its trading partners it is still lagging behind in the quality of broadband provided by the operators, and in the price customers have to pay. The majority of customers are still on services that provide only 256Kb/s or 512Kb/s. Telstra, however, does make an 8Mb/s available, but this is not a guaranteed speed, only a best-effort service.

Telstra's competitors are leading the market in the higher speed ADSL2+ services market. The regulator has finally been able to force better unbundled local loop and spectrum-sharing wholesale services into the market, and affordable true-broadband services are now available. Telstra is only making ADSL2+ available in those exchanges where its competitors have installed their own DSLAMs, so it is being a follower rather than a leader in new and innovative broadband services, a fact that is hampering a more rapid deployment of this superior infrastructure.

Broadband infrastructure is essential for the social and economic development of the country and both the current Government and the Opposition have broadband policies in place, aimed at ensuring that regional and other fringe areas will receive services that are equivalent to those available in the more economically viable metropolitan areas of the country.

However, before any further plans are developed the government will have to establish the right regulatory environment. It would be foolish to allow for the overbuilding of infrastructure; a far better option would be to ensure the sharing of infrastructure.

For this to happen, the government will need to act upon its operational separation legislation, which was passed in Parliament back in 2005. Only when this is sorted out can responsible investment decisions be made and responsible government funding be put in place. As we have seen in other countries, this will enable more companies to enter the facilities-based market (even in regional markets) in addition to entering the services market.

Content

  • 1. Australian Broadband Statistics
    • 1.1 International Comparisons
    • 1.2 Subscriber Statistics
    • 1.3 Broadband Revenues
    • 1.4 Broadband Access Technologies
      • 1.4.1 Adsl
      • 1.4.2 Cable Modem
    • 1.5 Internet
      • 1.5.1 Internet Subscribers
      • 1.5.2 Internet Access Technologies
      • 1.5.3 Internet Access Speeds
    • 1.6 Business Market
    • 1.7 Residential Users
      • 1.7.1 Internet Usage By Children
  • 2. Market Forecasts - 2005 - 2015
  • Table 1 - Broadband access among Internet households - selected countries - 2001 - 2007
  • Table 2 - Average maximum broadband speeds - international benchmark
  • Table 3 - Number of countries with broadband speeds of more than 256Kb/s - 2002 - 2006
  • Table 4 - Total Australian broadband subscribers - 1996 - 2009
  • Table 5 - Number of Australian households and technology penetration - 2007
  • Table 6 - Broadband subscribers - total market by value - 2002 - 2008
  • Table 7 - Broadband subscribers - total market - annual growth - 2003 - 2008
  • Table 8 - Broadband subscribers - market share by provider - 2003 - 2008
  • Table 9 - Broadband revenues by major provider - 2000 - 2007
  • Table 10 - Broadband revenues by major provider - annual change - 2003 - 2007
  • Table 11 - Broadband revenue market share by major provider - 2003 - 2007
  • Table 12 - Why the average home will soon require 50Mb/s to the home
  • Table 13 - Broadband subscribers by technology - 2001 - 2006
  • Table 14 - Broadband DSL retail subscribers - 2002 - 2006
  • Table 15 - Current and planned competitive DSLAM roll outs*
  • Table 16 - Internet service providers with DSLAM infrastructure - 2006 - 2007
  • Table 17 - Number of ADSL and ADSL2+ enabled exchanges - June 2006
  • Table 18 - Number of infrastructure providers by ADSL-enabled exchanges - June 2006
  • Table 19 - ADSL2+ subscribers by provider - 2006 - 2007
  • Table 20 - Cable broadband subscribers per operator - 2001 - 2007
  • Table 21 - Internet subscribers per state - 2002 - 2007
  • Table 22 - Portion of Internet subscribers per state - 2002 - 2007
  • Table 23 - Dial-up and broadband subscriber overview - mid-2006
  • Table 24 - Dial-up and non-dial-up Internet subscribers - 2003 - 2006
  • Table 25 - Business, government and household Internet subscribers - 2005 - 2006
  • Table 26 - Internet subscribers by type by ISP size - 2005 - 2006
  • Table 27 - Proportion of Internet subscribers by type by ISP size - 2005 - 2006
  • Table 28 - Internet subscribers by type and download speeds - September 2006
  • Table 29 - Internet subscribers by access technology - September 2006
  • Table 30 - Internet subscribers - dial-up vs non-dial-up - 2004 - 2007
  • Table 31 - Internet households & business users - 1985; 1990; 1995 - 2006
  • Table 32 - Data downloaded by dial-up and non-dial up users - 2003 - 2006
  • Table 33 - Data downloaded by households, business and government - 2000 - 2006
  • Table 34 - Data downloaded by households, business & government - 2004 - 2007
  • Table 35 - Numbers of ISPs by size - September 2006 - March 2007
  • Table 36 - Internet subscribers by access technology - September 2006 - Mar 2007
  • Table 37 - Internet subscribers and ISPs by access technology - June 2006
  • Table 38 - Internet subscribers by download speed - Sep 2006 - Mar 2007
  • Table 39 - ISPs & business/government Internet subscribers by download speed - June 2006
  • Table 40 - Business broadband subscribers - 2002 - 2008; 2010
  • Table 41 - Business broadband ARPU & annual change - 2004 - 2006
  • Table 42 - Business market Internet revenue - 1997 - 2007
  • Table 43 - Percentage of business usage of technology - 1994; 1998; 2000 - 2005
  • Table 44 - Percentage computer and Internet use by employment size - 2003 - 2005
  • Table 45 - Percentage computer and Internet use by total income - 2003 - 2005
  • Table 46 - Percentage computer and Internet use by industry- 2003 - 2005
  • Table 47 - Percentage computer and Internet use by state - 2003 - 2005
  • Table 48 - Percentage computer and Internet use by total region - 2003 - 2005
  • Table 49 - Percentage purchasing over the Internet - 2001 - 2005
  • Table 50 - Main type of Internet connection - 2004 - 2005
  • Table 51 - Main type of broadband connection - 2004 - 2005
  • Table 52 - Barriers to broadband usage - 2004 - 2005
  • Table 53 - Proportion of businesses using broadband by country - 2005
  • Table 54 - Household Internet connection by type of access - 2005 - 2006
  • Table 55 - Personal use of the Internet by type of access - 2005 - 2006
  • Table 56 - Household Internet access by type of broadband access - 2005 - 2006
  • Table 57 - Number of Australian households and technology penetration - 2007
  • Table 58 - Households with access to a home computer by region - 1998 - 2006
  • Table 59 - Percentage use of the Internet according to location - 2005 - 2006
  • Table 60 - Percentage use of the Internet at home by purpose - 2005 - 2006
  • Table 61 - Percentage use of the Internet at home by main purpose - 2005 - 2006
  • Table 62 - Main reasons for not having access to the Internet at home - 2005 - 2006
  • Table 63 - Frequency of use of the Internet at home by gender and region - 2005 - 2006
  • Table 64 - Computerisation in the home - May 2006
  • Table 65 - Internet usage in the last 12 months - May 2006
  • Table 66 - Internet applications used in the past 12 months - May 2006
  • Table 67 - Banking channel preferred by CBA survey respondents - 2006
  • Table 68 - Children's use of computers by site - 2005 - 2006
  • Table 69 - Children's use of a computer at home by activities - 2005 - 2006
  • Table 70 - Children's use of a computer at home by frequency - 2005 - 2006
  • Table 71 - Children's use of the Internet by site - 2005 - 2006
  • Table 72 - Children's use of the Internet at home by activities - 2005 - 2006
  • Table 73 - Children's use of the Internet at home by type of Internet sites accessed - 2005 - 2006
  • Table 74 - Children's use of the Internet at home by frequency - 2005 - 2006
  • Table 75 - Children's use of the Internet by type of Internet access - 2005 - 2006
  • Table 76 - Broadband component of Internet households - 2005 - 2010; 2015
  • Table 77 - Revenue make-up scenario forecasting - 2010
  • Table 78 - Residential spend per household per annum - 2003; 2010; 2015
  • Table 79 - Overview total Telecoms/Internet market - 2015
  • Table 80 - Residential Broadband growth predictions - next ten years
  • Table 81 - Broadband revenues - 2005; 2010; 2015
  • Table 82 - Broadband market share by technology - 2005; 2010; 2015