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Government pledges faster broadband funds | Government pledges faster broadband funds |
(about 2 hours later) | |
In Wednesday's Autumn Statement, Chancellor Philip Hammond will announce £400m ($500m) funding for a new Digital Infrastructure Investment Fund. | In Wednesday's Autumn Statement, Chancellor Philip Hammond will announce £400m ($500m) funding for a new Digital Infrastructure Investment Fund. |
Private investors will be asked to match the amount. | Private investors will be asked to match the amount. |
The money will be aimed at fibre broadband providers who are looking to expand. | The money will be aimed at fibre broadband providers who are looking to expand. |
Mr Hammond will also commit £740m to the development of 5G and the further rollout of fibre connections. | |
There is no launch date for the 5G service yet. | |
The UK must move towards providing "fibre-to-the-property" broadband, rather than fibre to the roadside cabinet, the Chancellor will say. | The UK must move towards providing "fibre-to-the-property" broadband, rather than fibre to the roadside cabinet, the Chancellor will say. |
Currently only 2% of the UK has access to this "full-fibre" connection, offering download speeds of up to one gigabit per second, according to government figures, | Currently only 2% of the UK has access to this "full-fibre" connection, offering download speeds of up to one gigabit per second, according to government figures, |
That is 35 times faster than the 28.9Mbps average UK speed internet connection according to Ofcom. | That is 35 times faster than the 28.9Mbps average UK speed internet connection according to Ofcom. |
Full-fibre provision is already offered by some independent broadband providers such as Hyperoptic, Gigaclear and B4rn, but to thousands rather than millions of customers. | Full-fibre provision is already offered by some independent broadband providers such as Hyperoptic, Gigaclear and B4rn, but to thousands rather than millions of customers. |
BT chairman Sir Mike Rake said the firm had developed an interim technology to get more full-fibre broadband to the property. | |
"We are committed to getting fibre to the premise ultimately, which is the long-term game, because it's much more reliable," he told the Today programme. | |
Until that is rolled out, BT will "substantially enhance" speeds for 95% of the country, he said. | |
Twelve million homes would also have broadband speeds in excess of 300Mbps by 2020 as part of a £6bn investment package, he added. | |
Dan Howdle, consumer telecoms expert from the website cable.co.uk said the government's funding of superfast broadband was "absurd" at a time when so many people struggle to get reasonable speeds. | |
"The government should be spending this money where it matters most, along with putting in place firm restrictions as to exactly where this new network provision can be applied - prioritising those who need it most," he said. | |
Fibre infrastructure provider CityFibre said it welcomed the announcement. | |
"Britain's industrial strategy needs a digital backbone, and it is essential that we move quickly to plug the UK's 'fibre gap' and empower our service-based economy," said chief executive Greg Mesch. | |
Analysis: Rory Cellan-Jones, BBC Technology Correspondent | Analysis: Rory Cellan-Jones, BBC Technology Correspondent |
You've heard of superfast, and maybe ultrafast but now the government has come up with a new term - gold standard full-fibre broadband. | You've heard of superfast, and maybe ultrafast but now the government has come up with a new term - gold standard full-fibre broadband. |
What is interesting about this announcement - which by the way was first trailed in last year's Autumn Statement - is an acknowledgement that the UK's broadband strategy may have been on the wrong track. | What is interesting about this announcement - which by the way was first trailed in last year's Autumn Statement - is an acknowledgement that the UK's broadband strategy may have been on the wrong track. |
So far most of the public money invested in broadband infrastructure has gone to BT, whose strategy has been to roll out fibre to the roadside cabinet, not to the home. | So far most of the public money invested in broadband infrastructure has gone to BT, whose strategy has been to roll out fibre to the roadside cabinet, not to the home. |
As the Treasury says in its press release, that has made the UK look good in terms of "superfast" coverage - although some would quibble at the definition of superfast. | As the Treasury says in its press release, that has made the UK look good in terms of "superfast" coverage - although some would quibble at the definition of superfast. |
But as for that gold standard full-fibre broadband piped right into the home - well, the government admits we're falling behind, with only 2% of premises currently having access to it. | But as for that gold standard full-fibre broadband piped right into the home - well, the government admits we're falling behind, with only 2% of premises currently having access to it. |
The new money the government is promising will go to small operators rather than BT - and even if it does get to two million homes and businesses as promised, the UK is likely to remain a laggard in the full-fibre race. | The new money the government is promising will go to small operators rather than BT - and even if it does get to two million homes and businesses as promised, the UK is likely to remain a laggard in the full-fibre race. |
It will still be mainly up to BT to give the country the future-proof infrastructure it needs - and the government will be hoping that increased competition makes it up its game. | It will still be mainly up to BT to give the country the future-proof infrastructure it needs - and the government will be hoping that increased competition makes it up its game. |