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The accepted Hunter Valley Access Undertaking requires ARTC to submit documentation to the ACCC for the purposes of an annual compliance assessment. Section 4.10 and Schedule G of the undertaking requires the ACCC to determine whether ARTC has complied with the financial model and pricing principles specified in the undertaking and whether there has been any under or over recovery of revenue from users that needs to be reconciled.
Viterra is a bulk handling company that operates six bulk wheat port facilities in South Australia.
On 11 July 2013 the ACCC commenced a combined public inquiry into making final access determinations for a number of the fixed line services and the wholesale ADSL service.
The fixed line services are the:
The ACCC has commenced consultation on non-price terms and conditions and supplementary pricing issues for a number of related declared services:
The ACCC commences a public inquiry into making a final access determination for the Mobile Terminating Access Service (MTAS).
This project page contains Telstra’s submission of required measures 1(a) and 1(b), which relate to ‘pull through’ NBN connection processes.
The Hunter Valley Access Undertaking (HVAU) accepted by the ACCC on 29 June 2011 requires ARTC to submit documentation for the purposes of an annual compliance assessment conducted by the ACCC.
On 29 May 2013, the ACCC made a final access determination for the declared Wholesale ADSL Service.
The ACCC carried out a compliance assessment and determined that ARTC has complied with pricing principles specified in clause 4.10 of the undertaking for the period 1 July 2011 to 31 December 2011.
On 3 October 2012, the ACCC made a final access determination for the Local Bitstream Access Service (LBAS). A copy of the LBAS final access determination is available on the public register of access determinations.