fbpx
Print this page
Wednesday, 20 January 2016 12:36

Rural Canterbury getting connected

Written by  Richard Cosgrove
Spark managing director Simon Moutter. Spark managing director Simon Moutter.

Canterbury farms are about to become the most technologically capable in New Zealand.

Spark expects by December 2016 to have installed 4G wireless broadband network to 96% of where Canterbury works and lives, enabling internet connectivity at speeds previously only dreamed of in rural areas.

The ambitious plan was announced by Spark managing director Simon Moutter in Christchurch on December 10. Spark has worked with the Canterbury Mayoral Forum headed by Dame Margaret Bazley to ensure the needed network upgrades get fast tracking by the councils involved.

Timaru District mayor Damon Odey has led the digital connectivity task force for the Mayoral Forum and has worked with Spark for 12 months. Canterbury is the first province to get the Spark service, which Mouter says is unlikely to be repeated elsewhere in NZ.

An average house now downloads more data in one day than the whole of NZ used per month in 1990, and there is a growing digital divide between rural and urban NZ. About 32,000 rural homes now have less ultra-fast internet capacity than the Government deems desirable.

Spark has chosen to use 4G wireless because the other alternatives – ADSL and fibre-optic – either need infrastructure that is too expensive or deliver service that deteriorates with distance from an exchange.

The 4G rural wireless network runs at 40-135 megabits/second; most competitors offer a maximum of only 10 mb/s.

Spark is offering two data plans: a naked broadband connection priced at $95.99 a month for 80GB of data, and a broadband and landline option at $105.99 per month for 80GB of data and free national calling. The deal includes a wi-fi base station that connects devices to the internet.

This opens the door to precision agriculture: farmers will be able to download previously unobtainable data and have it transmitted to their smartphones.

It will enable efficient irrigation and no wasted water, and improved farm security with farmers able to put sensors and cameras on gates to trigger alerts. It will improve farm safety, allowing staff to be contacted or to call for help.

Stuart Gray, Fonterra, says 300 of the co-op's farmers cannot get email – a huge disadvantage. This will change.

And migrant workers will be able to do their industry qualifications online and stay connected to their families more reliably.

More like this

Is augmented reality the future of farming?

Imagine a farmer being able to tell a paddock’s pasture cover and dry matter content just by looking at it, or accessing information about a cow’s body condition score in the same way.

Winds a major blow

Farmers with irrigators blown over and damaged in a pair of back-to-back windstorms may not get them working again this side of Christmas, according to Mid-Canterbury Federated Farmers president David Clark.

Featured

Demand for food support increases

New findings from not-for-profit food supply and distribution organization, the New Zealand Food Network (NZFN) have revealed a 42% increase in demand for food support in 2023 compared to 2022.

Herd production performance soars

New data released by LIC and DairyNZ shows New Zealand dairy farmers have achieved the highest six week in-calf rate and lowest notin- calf rate on record.

Council lifeline for A&P Show

Christchurch City Council and the Canterbury Agricultural and Pastoral Association (CAPA) have signed an agreement which will open more of Canterbury Agricultural Park for public use while helping to provide long-term certainty for the A&P Show.

Rural Advocacy Hub announced for Fieldays

This year’s Fieldays will feature a Rural Advocacy Hub - bringing together various rural organisations who are advocating for farmers and championing their interests as one team, under one roof, for the first time.

Struggling? Give us a call

ASB head of rural banking Aidan Gent is encouraging farmers to speak to their banks when they are struggling.

National

Rural Change to merge with RST

The Rural Change programme, providing free private mental health professional sessions to the rural industry, is set to continue its…

Machinery & Products

Factory clocks up 60 years

There can't be many heavy metal fans who haven’t heard of Basildon, situated about 40km east of London and originally…

PM opens new Power Farming facility

Morrinsville based Power Farming Group has launched a flagship New Zealand facility in partnership with global construction manufacturer JCB Construction.