Vodafone has switched on a major expansion of its network that will double mobile coverage across Australia, as the TPG-owned telco vows to ramp up competition with Telstra in regional areas.
The network expansion, part of a deal to share infrastructure with Optus, increases Vodafoneโs reach from around 400,000 square kilometres to more than one million square kilometres. This will boost the companyโs coverage from 95.4 to 98.4 per cent of the Australian population, and is expected to inject much-needed competition into the regional market.
TPG Telecom โ which owns Vodafone โ has expanded their network in Australia in a bid to compete with Telstra and Optus. Credit: Pat Scala, Rob Homer
Vodafone group executive boss Kieren Cooney said the expansion focused on โgetting rid of the bush taxโ.
โWhat weโve heard for decades, is that Australians โฆ who travel to regional areas or live in regional areas, theyโre sick of not really having a choice and theyโre sick of having to pay a premium for regional coverage, which they rightly consider as a bush tax,โ he said.
โSo we are sitting here and saying, maybe thereโs a better way to solve that and provide more competition and more options โฆ and take on some of the big incumbents because we know there are people who want more options and competition.โ
In Victoria, Vodafone has gained access to an additional 602 mobile sites, meaning customers will now get more coverage along key inland travel routes such as the Calder and Murray Valley highways.
NSW customers will gain access to an additional 689 mobile sites, improving coverage in areas such as Wagga, Griffith, Coffs Harbor and Port Macquarie.
Cooney confirmed the expansion was part of Vodafoneโs plan to compete with rivals such as Telstra in the long term.
โWeโre here to try to find a way to better service customers in Australia, and this is a way we can really level the playing field, which will allow us to compete in a really meaningful way,โ he said.