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Australia Post mail delivery vehicles to help improve phone black-spot-mapping in regional Australia

For generations, your local postie has delivered goods from far flung places, as well as news from distant friends.

However, soon they may also help deliver better mobile phone reception as part of a national audit of reception black spots.

Mobile signal-tracking devices will be installed on Australia Post vehicles to help measure how strong or weak reception is as they make deliveries across the country.

“This will provide a clear and accurate evidence base to target mobile black spots,” Minister for Communications Michelle Rowland said.

“Consumers know that the predictive coverage maps which are issued by the carriers, are not always accurate on the ground.”

The lack of reliable mobile and internet coverage has been an issue for those living in regional and remote Australia for years.

Sunlight bathed rugged rocky outcrops and bush-covered mountains stretch to the horizon
Mountainous terrain is magnificent to look at, but not so great for mobile phone coverage.(Supplied: Dan Broun)

Areas with little or no reception — or not enough capacity to handle surges in demand — are known colloquially as black spots.

The federal government’s Mobile Black Spot Program was started in 2015 and aimed to improve mobile coverage and competition across Australia.

There have been multiple rounds of funding and, so far, that has seen a further 1,047 base stations activated, as at October 25, 2022.

Increasing reliance on reliable coverage

The bane of a black spot is all-too-real for farmers such as James Walsh, who runs a property and an agricultural tech business near Epping Forest in northern Tasmania.

“It becomes frustrating,” he said. “We can drive around on the farm and we might have one bar. That might be enough for the phone to ring or go to message bank but often it drops out during calls.”

Tasmania’s topography makes it much more challenging to provide coverage across long distances compared to the rolling flats of country Victoria.

Mr Walsh said reliable internet coverage was also becoming “critical” for farmers, who rely on remote monitoring and control devices to run irrigators, survey their properties, make management decisions and muster help if needed.

“The better coverage and the more redundancy put into the system — as more and more people become reliant on it — the better the system is,” Mr Walsh said.

A man stands with a phone in his hand by a silo
At least one expert wonders if using Australia Post to gauge network coverage is the best way.(ABC Rural: Jo Prendergast)

How will the posties help?

Many details are still being worked out, such as how much data is needed, which areas specifically of the country will be targeted and how long it will take.

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