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section heading icon     operation

This page considers some questions about the operation of access BPL.

It covers -

The following pages discuss trials and regulatory exploration of broadband powerline communication in Australia, New Zealand and overseas.

subsection heading icon     introduction

Much of the enthusiasm about BPL is predicated on misconceptions that it is a cheap and robust 'plug & play' technology, particularly a technology that will encourage utilities or their partners to provide free connectivity.

Some people thus assume that there will be no substantial investment in hardware (or in network management software and personnel) and that maintenance costs will be lower than those experienced by PSTN or wireless network operators.

One fan thus blithely assured us that

the electricity lines are already there - you don't need to do anything to them. People in Africa and Tasmania will all get the net without having to bend over for the phone company.

Providing connectivity is alas more complicated. Access BPL requires investment in equipment at either end of the power grid, for example as a bridge between the internet backbone and the utility's network. It also requires equipment along the length of that network, with in some instances 'notching' at short intervals.

Much of that equipment operates in hostile environments, for example high temperatures, electromagnetic noise and occasional spikes through lightning strikes. As noted in the preceding page, there are uncertainties about the lifespan of equipment in urban and regional Australia but replacement and ongoing maintenance costs are an issue.

Ken Tipping of the Canadian National Research Research Council commented (PDF)

Technical studies of test links have been carried out in Canada and elsewhere. However, these have been based upon much simpler networks that are envisaged in practice, and over relatively short timescales, which are in general insufficient for the assessment of the effects upon unwanted emissions of component degradation and damage either of the BPL hardware, or more importantly, of insulator degradation, joint corrosion and other problems with the power line infrastructure being used.

Networks of course do not manage themselves. BPL providers accordingly need to address issues such as billing, customer help, traffic management and compliance.

Some utilities have decided that their existing skill sets and customer relationship databases can be used or extended. They have thus sought to position themselves as 'utilicoms', although as we note elsewhere on this site most have become disillusioned with the vision of combining connectivity with provision of gas, electricity, water, heating or sewerage services.

Others, as discussed below, have essentially licensed use of their grid to a partner in the expectation that they can thereby gain a share of revenue without major investment, liability or operational expenditure.

subsection heading icon     logistics

Most have grappled with logistics challenges in rebuilding existing grids to accommodate connectivity along with the transmission of power. Experience in using the grid for controlling meters appears to have been substantially different from what is required for delivering internet traffic (including voice services).

Utilities have thus highlighted issues such as

  • the compactness of equipment to be located on poles, within existing substations or in new kerbside sites
  • the amount of equipment to be installed and its cost, of particular interest to utilities and partners that have accepted claims that a new BPL solution is a major leap forward" and competitive
  • ease of installation
  • the ability to readily identify and replace defective equipment (eg a single 'notch' among many on a long line), given concerns about the reliability of service and about labour costs in network maintenance
  • safety for utility employees, contractors and the general public
  • potential degradation of reliable power supply, eg parts of the grid having to be turned off while equipment is replaced
  • high data transfer rates
  • the reliability of equipment, given investment in equipment and potential problems in 'retrieving' equipment that has been placed underground to minimise interference.

One US critic commented

People are mistaken in thinking that BPL providers are going to go out of their way to deliver BPL to country folk, as if this is some kind of humanitarian effort to get the country on the 'net. It's not. Companies are in business to make a profit, plain and simple. Being a good corporate citizen in a community makes great press releases, but such efforts stop when the bottom line is affected.

and went on to note

... the upstream Internet network must be backhauled to each BPL feed point via telco facilities such as fiber or copper. So to deploy BPL an up front investment must be made in BPL headend/feed point equipment and repeaters. There's going to be significant recurring costs in backhauling the IP traffic from the numerous BPL feedpoints serving an area. Neither DSL or Cable has this recurring cost or need for multiple network origination points. These costs unique to BPL make it even less attractive for deployment in rural areas that Cable or DSL as customer densities and revenue potential is lower. While it may be stated by BPL providers that initial metropolitan buildouts are needed to subsidize rural deployments, why would any for-profit company expand into rural areas when it's a losing proposition?

In Australia the CEO of startup Silk indicated in March 2006 that Access BPL was not currently competitive, commenting that it was cheaper to lease Telstra's copper network.

subsection heading icon     whose network?

Much of the enthusiasm for access BPL among consumers reflects perceptions that a delivery of broadband by their power utility will

  • provide meaningful competition for incumbent telecommunication operators
  • be cheaper than the incumbent, as the utility has infrastructure in place and supposedly will not charge 'line rental' (or even other fees)
  • efficiencies are so great that utilities can cut charges to consumers while sharing revenue with service providers.

That is not necessarily the case. Some observers have accordingly asked 'whose network?'. Should there be a 'must carry' or 'open access' requirement that is similar to unbundling of the PSTN local loop. Others have doubted that utilities will forgo revenue opportunities.

We can broadly identify three models.

In the first, the utility operates as a full service provider. It builds/owns and operates the electricity network. It also serves as a telecommunications provider, becoming a 'utilicom', offering 'last mile' access to the internet and the PSTN. It does not allow competitors to use its network.

In the second model the utility builds/owns the infrastructure, allowing access to that network by one or more service providers and using the connectivity services of those providers.

In the third model, often labelled the 'dark cable' model, the utility licences to a service provider the responsibility for funding and deploying BPL hardware on its electricity network. The service provider is also responsible for connectivity services and has essentially leased a 'right of way'.

Mechanisms for funding upgrade of networks are contentious, with some US consumer advocacy groups for example expressing concern that all customers of a particular utility will be forced to subsidise investment in a service that they do not want.

 


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