Bell Canada Enterprises, Inc. announced Monday it extended its Fibe Internet and television service to most parts of Quebec City.
Unlike in most other Fibe-enabled Canadian cities, Bell’s network in Quebec City offers true fiber to the home service, not a combination of fiber to the neighborhood/copper wire. That means increased broadband speeds — downloads up to 175Mbps and uploads of up to 30Mbps. Quebec City was selected for true fiber service because of of the predominance of overhead aerial wiring, which is much easier and cheaper to replace with fiber than underground wiring. For other major Canadian cities like Montreal and Toronto, Bell has made do with a lesser network that combines fiber and existing copper phone wiring that offers lower capacity for broadband and video services.
Bell says Fibe is now open for business in the region’s boroughs of Quebec, Beauport, Sillery, Ste-Foy, Cap-Rouge, Charlesbourg, L’Ancienne-Lorette, Loretteville, Sainte-Therese-de-Lisieux and Montmorency. Service for Levis is expected shortly.
The company says it intends to reserve additional fiber to the home service primarily for multi-dwelling units and new housing developments in Ontario and Quebec, primarily between Windsor in the west and Quebec City in the east.
The company’s aggressive deployment of fiber is an effort to stem landline losses in eastern Canada. Between cell phone providers and cable companies like Rogers, Cogeco, and Quebecor’s Vidéotron Ltee., Canadians have been hanging up permanently on Bell landlines at an alarming rate for the company.
Dvai Ghose, analyst at Canaccord Genuity told his clients, “Bell is now reporting amongst the worst residential line losses in North America.” In the last quarter alone, 90,000 Bell customers said goodbye, perhaps permanently.
Bell has lost more than 1.2 million customers in the last two years. Even Fibe may not be enough to stem the losses. Canadians are not excited by the company’s video or broadband services, adding only around 27,000 new customers in the last quarter. Bell’s notorious love of Internet Overcharging schemes like usage caps may be partly responsible. The company enjoys a poor reputation among Internet enthusiasts for its wholehearted support for usage-limiting Canada’s online experience.
Financial analysts believe aggressive deployment of Fibe may be critical to the company’s long term survival. Not only must Bell compete with a trend towards wireless phones, it has cable competitors selling triple play packages of phone, Internet and television service at prices that are frequently lower than what Bell charges.
Fibe is expected to be expanded to include the entire island of Montreal and some of the surrounding region by the end of 2012.
[flv width=”640″ height=”380″]http://www.phillipdampier.com/video/Bell Entertainment Fibre Internet and TV in Canada.flv[/flv]
An extended length introductory commercial for Bell Canada’s Fibe TV and Internet. (6 minutes)
is it capped?