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GLOBAL SCENARIO

The Chairman and Strategy

Officer of Prysmian Group,

Massimo Tononi and Fabio

Romeo, welcomed Italy’s

Prime Minister Matteo Renzi at

the Dee Why plant, which he

visited during his attendance

at the G20 summit in Australia

last November.

Prysmian was chosen by the

Australian Government as a

partner in one of the world’s most

innovative projects for broadband

telecommunications networks, the

National Broadband Network, that

will connect 93% of residential and

commercial buildings across the vast

continent-country. Prysmian was

awarded the contract to design and

supply optical cables for the rollout

of the network, worth approximately

223 million, in 2011. More than 3

million km of fibre and 14,000 km

of cable has been supplied to date.

The path chosen by the Australian

Government, which has decided

to build the country’s broadband

network itself, could provide a

good example for Europe, as the

EU has already announced a

300

billion package of investment in

infrastructures.

A visitor of distinction

Prysmian welcomed Italy’s Prime Minister, Matteo Renzi, to its Australian optical

cable facility at Dee Why. The Group is partner to the Australian Government

in the National Broadband Network project, which will cover 93% of the country

Mr Renzi addressed the Prysmian

audience in Dee Why by saying

it was “a great honor to visit an

Italian multinational that managed

to become a world leader” and that

is proving it by working day by day

on a major, continent-wide project

in Australia. The Italian PM also said

that Prysmian has become what it is

thanks to its quality and excellence

and praised it as “a company

Italian pride

capable of understanding in advance

where the world is heading.”

In Mr Renzi’s words, Prysmian

Group represents one of the most

important Italian companies, with

a team of 20,000 people all over

the world, “proudly Italian and

multinational at the same time. A

company that creates innovation

and quality, meaning it certainly

creates the future.”

A long-standing presence

Prysmian is among the few Italian companies with plants in Australia, a

country where it has already worked on important projects such as the

Basslink, a high voltage submarine power line to transport renewable

energy from the island of Tasmania to the state of Victoria. Optical cables

for the NBN network are being manufactured at the technologically

advanced Dee Why factory, recently enlarged after winning the NBN

contract. Prysmian has operated in Australia and New Zealand since 1975,

with three production facilities, manufacturing opticals and power cables

and employing around 500 people.

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Prysmian Group Insight