German industry warns against underinvestment in fibre telecom links

(Repeats Friday item)

* VDMA says vectoring discourages investments in fibre

* Berlin has promised 50 Mbps for all households by 2018

* Mittelstand in the countryside struggles with Industrie 4.0

By Georgina Prodhan and Harro Ten Wolde

FRANKFURT, April 21 (Reuters) - Germany's powerful engineering industry fears the country will miss out on becoming a global power in digital manufacturing due to complacency about investing in a high-speed, fibre-based telecoms network.

Taking aim at the government, the industry's VDMA lobby says Germany risks heading into an industrial dead-end with the strategy for data connections in remoter areas, where many of its often small but world-class engineering firms are based.

In a position paper seen by Reuters, the association questions how former state monopoly Deutsche Telekom is being allowed to overhaul its old copper wire network. This, it believes, discourages competition and the rolling out of faster, but more expensive, fibre connections.

Deutsche Telekom is relying heavily on vectoring, a technique which improves transmission speeds on the "last mile" of copper wire linking fibre connections at the street cabinet to homes and businesses.

The VDMA, which represents thousands of firms with combined annual revenue of over $200 billion, regards this as a stop-gap and says fibre connections right to the destination building are the only way to meet the medium-term demands of German industry.

"The risk is that a bridging technology like vectoring, when it is implemented in a monopolistic way, will lead Germany as an industrial location into a cul-de-sac in a few years," it said in the position paper this month.

It is not happy that for technical reasons only Deutsche Telekom can provide the upgraded copper links. "In the worst case, the monopoly supplier would rest on its laurels with vectoring technology and neglect further investments."

The document is for internal circulation but, with Germany lagging many competitors in Europe and Asia in providing fibre connections, the paper's author Johannes Gernandt says the government in Berlin should take note. "They have to think further ahead now," he told Reuters.

REASONABLE TIMEFRAME

Deutsche Telekom, in which the government holds 32 percent, says vectoring allows it to do much more, much faster.

"Many homes and companies would be stuck with slow internet for many more years," a spokesman said. "This way, we can guarantee that households now will have fast internet within a reasonable timeframe."

At stake is Berlin's Industrie 4.0 strategy to promote digital manufacturing. This promises to enable leaps in the speed of developing products, as well as technology that detects faults and fixes machines before they break down or that allows parts to tell assembly lines how they need to be put together.