System rollout saves $12 million in travel expenses
Hamish Barwick (Computerworld) 31 October, 2011 16:19
Taxpayers and the Federal Government have both benefited from the rollout of a National Telepresence System (NTS) in 2009 with savings of $12 million in travel costs reported.
For one meeting connected to 12 different locations, the government estimated to have saved $100,600 in costs relating to travel. It has also been able to reduce carbon emissions by not having officials travel to meetings in
The NTS includes 36 Telepresence sites connecting the seven Commonwealth Government offices, Prime Ministerial and Cabinet offices, Parliament House and the offices of Premiers and Chief Minister agencies in every state and territory to one secure, high definition video conferencing facility.
First announced in February 2009 as a joint initiative between Telstra and Cisco, the network has been operating for 18 months. It uses the Telstra Next Internet Protocol (IP) network combined with Cisco's Telepresence video conferencing technology.
Cisco
“The Government established the NTS to reduce the travel and consequent carbon emissions, fiscal costs and productivity losses associated with meetings of COAG officials, Ministerial Council officials and other intergovernmental-related interactions,” he said.
Cisco has also been targeting the education sector with its Telepresence system and in July signed a deal with
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