Business World

Broadband plan could move forward by June

- By Imee Charlee C. Delavin Senior Reporter

THE Department of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology (DICT) could start putting in place its planned national broadband project within the first half of the year, pending the go signal from President Rodrigo R. Duterte.

DICT Secretary Rodolfo A. Salalima said the newly created department submitted to the President “about two weeks ago” the blueprint for the nationwide­broadband system which, if pursued, would provide connectivi­ty to areas not served by commercial telco players.

“We’re asking the President’s approval if the blueprint is okay with him so we can add more flesh into the plan and start implementi­ng it,” Mr. Salalima told reporters late last week .

The DICT expects a national broadband system to be up and running within the term of the President which ends in 2022.

“We can start this year, maybe by the first half. Once the President says proceed, then we will start,” the DICT chief added.

The broadband network plan which the agency submitted to Malacañang is a “working physical infrastruc­ture” — which the government intends to use to reach parts of the countrysid­e not serviced by commercial telcos. Since the system is “hybrid” however, the infrastruc­ture could be rented out and “services of the telcos, including their physical components, may also be tapped as part of that broadband plan whatever is more cost-efficient for the government.”

Mr. Salalima earlier said the department submitted to the Office of the President on Oct. 3 a proposal detailing three options for the national broadband network: the first option is putting up a “purely physical infrastruc­ture in the countrysid­e, where the services of a telco will be needed; the hybrid option two — which he personally recommende­d and the DICT decided to submit; and the third option is for the government to become a third-party operator.

The DICT expects to complete the implementa­tion of the broadband plan in “three to five years,” although availabili­ty of existing government assets like the rightof-way of the National Grid Corp. of the Philippine­s (NGCP) could fast track the project.

“It could start running in a year even if it’s not yet complete … but at least there’s already a broadband,” Mr. Salalima added.

Assuming that the government will start its national broadband network project — to serve the requiremen­ts of government and areas in the countrysid­e unreached by the telcos — from scratch, the cost could come in anywhere between P77 billion and P200 billion.

The project, flagged by DICT as one of its priorities, follows the $329.5-million National Broadband Network deal with China’s state- owned Zhong Xing Telecommun­ications ( ZTE) Corp., which was abandoned in 2007 due to a corruption scandal.

A national broadband plan is expected to address public demand for faster and affordable Internet.

Mr. Salalima said there are already a lot of possible partners, funders, service providers, and suppliers expressing interest in the project.

In November, he noted that the “two biggest” Chinese firms have approached the DICT for the project.

The Philippine­s continues to lag the Asia- Pacific in terms of Internet connection speed. The latest Akamai report showed the Philippine­s ranked second to last among economies in the region, recording a 4.2 megabits per second (mbps) average connection speed in the July to August period, only higher than India’s 4.1 mbps — the slowest among the 15 economies measured in the Asia-Pacific. Globally, South Korea recorded the fastest average connection speed with 26.3 mbps.

Internet service in the Philippine­s is also one of the most expensive in the world, averaging $ 18 ( P840)/ mbps compared to the global average of $5 (P230)/ mbps.

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