ON-FARM

Program could go further - NFF

Broadband performance monitoring a start

Kristy Moroney

This article is 8 years old. Images might not display.

The program, announced on April 7, will see Australian consumers receive independent information about broadband speeds based on feedback from remote testing at more than 4000 households.

National Farmers’ Federation (NFF) president Fiona Simson said while the initiative was welcomed, the monitoring program could go further.

“At the moment the program will only cover fixed line services, and it is fair to say that the majority of membership across the RRRCC accesses NBN services either through fixed wireless or the Sky Muster satellite,” Simson said.

"There is also a need for greater understanding and accountability around how these services are performing,” she said.

“It is telling that even the ACCC Commissioner, Rod Sims, has acknowledged that the majority of complaints are coming from regional areas.”

The Australian Communications Consumer Action Network (ACCAN) CEO, Teresa Corbin, said the top complaint about internet services to the Telecommunications Industry Ombudsman (TIO) is in relation to faulty services and slow speeds, indicating there is a gap between consumer expectations of how their services will perform, and actual performance.

"This program will provide consumers the needed information on average performance to make considered purchasing choices,” Corbin said.

The RRRCC is calling on the Government to commit to five actions:

  1. A universal service obligation for both voice and data
  2. Customer service guarantees to deliver more accountability from providers and NBN
  3. Long term public funding for open access mobile network expansion (blackspots)
  4. Fair and equitable access to Sky Muster satellite for those with a genuine need for the service
  5. Fully resourced capacity-building programs that build digital ability

The Regional, Rural and Remote Communications Coalition is a group of organisations who have come together to end the data drought and champion better communications services for consumers and small businesses living in rural, remote or regional areas.

A growing series of reports, each focused on a key discussion point for the farming sector, brought to you by the Kondinin team.

A growing series of reports, each focused on a key discussion point for the farming sector, brought to you by the Kondinin team.

editions

Research Report: Agritechnica 2025 (January 2026)

This month’s Research Report covers the highlights from Agritechnica – the world’s largest trade fair and show for ag machinery and technology. The event is held every two years and attracts hundreds of thousands of visitors.

editions

Research Report: Mobile Phones (December 2025)

With the closure of Telstra’s 3G network, Kondinin Group engineers Josh Giumelli and Ben White put several popular 4G phones to the test to see how they stacked up. Our standard test protocol applied over the past two decades was maintained as each handset was measured by the maximum distance a two-way call could be made from a phone tower.

editions

Research Report: Side-by-side Vehicles (November 2025)

Kondinin Group’s research team dives into the side-by-side market for this report, looking at popular diesel models, a few petrol versions and a couple of electric vehicles.

editions

Research Report: Farming Inputs (October 2025)

Inputs are unavoidable in any farming system. This Research Report focuses on several key farming inputs with a view to maximising outputs, production and profit.