Aussie govt expands broadband plan
Relevant offers
Australia's government expanded its ambitious plan to bring broadband to much of the vast country, adding 300,000 homes and businesses to the coverage area in hopes of winning votes in next month's federal election.
The opposition has already pledged to ax the expensive, high-speed fiber optic network, known as the National Broadband Network, if it takes power in the Aug. 21 election.
The plan previously promised to deliver high-speed access to 90 percent of Australian homes and businesses, but Prime Minister Julia Gillard pushed its coverage Friday to 93 percent, turning the Internet plan into a campaign platform.
"The choice today couldn't be clearer: I will build the National Broadband Network. (The opposition) will not," Gillard said.
Australia trails behind other industrialized nations in terms of accessibility and cost of broadband Internet. The vast size and sparse population of the country increases costs of the infrastructure needed for high-speed Internet.
Campaigning in the western city of Perth, Gillard emphasized that the high-speed fiber optic network would create 25,000 new jobs and facilitate modern education that would keep Australia competitive against other nations.
"I simply don't understand why (the opposition) thinks it's a wise idea for children in this nation to get an education not of the same standard as children in Singapore," Gillard said. "To make sure our children get a world-class education, they need access to world-class technology."
A trial of the network, which is expected to take eight years to complete and estimated to cost 43 billion Australian dollars ($38.6 billion), began in three towns in Tasmania earlier this month.
The opposition fears the cost could exceed AU$80 billion, and Liberal Party leader Tony Abbott has said he would scrap the plan if his party takes power.
"We all want to see better broadband, more affordable broadband," Liberal communications spokesman Tony Smith told Australian Broadcasting Corp. radio. "But we make no apology for not matching Labor's monumentally reckless spending in this regard."
- AP
Sponsored links
Microsoft's man who monitors privacy
'Janitor satellite' made to clean up space
Australia to get R18 rating for games
iPad factory conditions 'better than the norm'
App turns iPhone into adult toy
Review: Samsung Series 7 UA46D7000
Bulgaria could suspend vote on ACTA
Internet in Iran severely disrupted as elections loom
Review: The Darkness 2 for Xbox 360
Nasdaq website disrupted by online attacks
Quake-safe building order 'forgotten' about
Stadium to be ready for Crusaders
Banned drivers get bosses' cars seized
Marryatt skips council debate to play golf
4.1 quake forces Jellie Park closures
Suppression lapses for teenager
Farm worker burst cow's eyeball with bar
Schoolgirl sex video man guilty
Cricketers' first appeal - no 'big buildings'
Joy for family on struggle street
Cop mistakes chocolate bar for cellphone
'Jesus is a c...' retailer fined in Invercargill
4.1 quake forces Jellie Park closures
Stadium to be ready for Crusaders
Quake-safe building order 'forgotten' about
Marryatt skips council debate to play golf
Banned drivers get bosses' cars seized
John Key tours Avonside Girls' High School
130 earthquake awards for Cantabrians