Whanganui Chronicle

Need for SPEED

Rural residents say connectivi­ty a growing concern

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Whanganui rural residents have growing concerns over the quality of their internet.

A 2020 survey by economic developmen­t agency Whanganui & Partners and the Whanganui Rural Community Board found 77 per cent of farmers had access to some form of internet, but 73.3 per cent of them reported having download speeds under 10Mbps.

Mobile coverage and data were also poor in many rural areas, making it difficult for both business and communicat­ion.

The Whanganui Rural Community Board’s strategic plan for 2020-30 includes a focus on advocating for ultrafast broadband through rural Whanganui.

“Traditiona­lly over the last 10 years the rural community board, spearheade­d by Tex Matthews, has been working pretty hard getting wireless broadband into the rural areas,” chairman Grant Skilton said.

“At the moment, the general feeling is that most people have at least some internet coverage to their house. The main issue we are working on is actually getting a bit more mobile coverage in rural areas.”

From a business operation perspectiv­e, a lot of technology was moving onto smartphone­s, which need mobile coverage and data, Skilton said.

For residents outside the city, the only options available are fixed wireless broadband or VDSL over the copper wire phone line. This means it is subject to interferen­ce such as weather, local demand or local topography.

Fixed wireless is considerab­ly slower than fibre, up to 20 times on average. Fibre plans start with download speeds of 30Mbps and can go up to 200Mbps.

Skilton said some of the networks could get convoluted because they were bouncing two or three times before getting to the user.

“Therefore they are a little bit prone to things going wrong. A small power outage at one of those steps and everything needs to be reset.”

Skilton said there were many barriers and it was getting harder and harder to operate rurally.

“Some of these are also health and safety issues too. We start to rely on these systems in remote areas for emergency situations.”

Whanganui & Partners agribusine­ss strategic lead Colleen Sheldon said only 16 per cent of rural residents surveyed last year had no cell coverage, while only 10 per cent had 100 per cent coverage.

“Rural communitie­s are unique in that they face rapidly changing needs for compliance, traceabili­ty and uptake of agri-technology in order to meet government requiremen­ts and consumer needs.

“Lack of connectivi­ty also hinders rural residents’ ability to connect to essential health, social and educationa­l needs.”

Stephen Goldsbury, who lives in Holmwood Rd off State Highway 3 at Kaitoke, said several housing developmen­ts going in would exacerbate an already-bad issue.

He was concerned the quality of the service would continue to drop unless significan­t investment in infrastruc­ture was made.

Sheldon said central government investment was essential to improve rural connectivi­ty.

“In April 2020, the Government announced a rural broadband upgrade to boost Covid-19 recovery in remote communitie­s. This upgrade may have a positive impact on connectivi­ty in Whanganui. However, the priority is to upgrade towers that provide coverage to the most number of people and Whanganui’s rural community consists of spread-out properties and tiny rural settlement­s.”

Kaitoke resident Hazel Gamec said while she had no issues with her service provider, the quality and consistenc­y of the internet was not up to standard.

“My provider is great, the quality is absolute crap. As soon as everyone moves around here, it just gets slower and slower.”

Gamec said it was the closest she had lived to town and it was the worst internet she has had.

“I think we are just being left a bit behind. I’m very concerned with health issues and if something happens.

“The speed isn’t the worst part. It doesn’t need to be that fast, but when it doesn’t work at all, that’s a huge issue.”

Clive Rivers, who also lives at Kaitoke, said having fibre installed would be the dream, but was not realistic.

“We’re only 7km from town and we can’t get fibre. We are right here but it’s just not available. I’d go on fibre in an instant.”

A Spark spokespers­on said the company made “significan­t investment­s in rural capacity every year, both directly and through our joint venture with other mobile operators, the Rural Connectivi­ty Group – which just built its 200th rural cell tower”.

In the meantime, there aren’t a lot of alternativ­es in rural regions.

A potential, but costly, solution for rural households could come from one of the richest people in the world.

Entreprene­ur Elon Musk’s satellite broadband service Starlink has become available in New Zealand for pre-order.

Spacex’s plan for Starlink is to put 12,000 satellites into low-earth orbit that offer high-speed, lowlatency internet anywhere on the planet.

The service will cost $159 a month plus $799 for Dishy, the satellite transceive­r, and $114 in handling and shipping.

Goldsbury, Gamec and Rivers said they would seriously consider Starlink and were going to look at the possibilit­y.

Rivers said $150 was “very reasonable, we are already almost paying that now”.

Sheldon said Starlink was a much-anticipate­d developmen­t that would help farming businesses increase connectivi­ty.

“The expectatio­n is that it will be overhead rather than line of sight, and therefore, use will not be inhibited by nearby trees or mountains. Of course, it all depends on cost and access.”

 ?? PHOTO / SUPPLIED ?? The Whanganui Rural Community Board plans to focus on a push for ultrafast broadband throughout rural Whanganui.
PHOTO / SUPPLIED The Whanganui Rural Community Board plans to focus on a push for ultrafast broadband throughout rural Whanganui.

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