BT pitches $788-mn plan for faster rural broadband in UK

epa04604506 (FILE) A file photo dated 10 May 2013 showing a BT logo on the wall of one of the group's offices in central London. British Telecom on 05 February 2015 said it had agreed to buy mobile carrier EE for 12.5 billion pounds (19 billion dollars). Under the deal, which needs approval by BT's shareholders and Britain's telecom regulator, BT will grant shares to Deutsche Telekom and Orange, both part-owners of EE. Deutsche Telekom will hold a 12-per-cent stake in the expanded BT group, while Orange will own 4 per cent of the company. EE is Britain's leading mobile carrier, with Europe's highest number of 4G customers. It has 24.5 million mobile phone customers and 834,000 broadband customers. BT said its purchase of EE is expected to be completed by March 2016.  EPA/FACUNDO ARRIZABALAGA

Bloomberg

BT Group Plc is proposing a 600 million-pound ($788 million) plan to bring faster Internet coverage to the rural UK, to be paid for by charges to other broadband users.
The former phone monopoly’s Openreach wholesale division by 2020 would build connections enabling broadband download speeds of at least 10 megabits per second for almost all of the remaining 5 percent of the population that doesn’t currently have them, according to a government statement on Sunday. That level of service would allow a family to stream high-definition TV shows and movies, video conference and surf the web, too.
The proposal follows months of talks between BT and the government over how to implement a universal service
obligation pledged by PM Theresa May’s Conservatives. UK politicians with rural constituencies in places like the Scottish Highlands are under pressure to boost broadband service. BT’s rivals that use its fixed network, the nation’s largest, to deliver Internet and landline phone services complain it doesn’t have enough of the full-fiber lines capable of delivering the fastest speeds.
The government said the voluntary plan would be delivered more quickly than an approach through regulation, though it will consider both. The idea of spreading costs for the plan among Openreach’s customers will be considered in an ongoing review about wholesale rates by communications regulator Ofcom, the govt. said.
“We warmly welcome BT’s offer and now will look at whether this or a regulatory approach works better for homes and businesses,” Culture Secretary Karen Bradley said in the statement.
Linking rural broadband to the other wholesale review may be seen by some of BT’s rivals as a quid pro quo regarding an already contentious topic that has divided the telecommunications industry. BT is fighting a rate cut proposed by Ofcom in March for one of Openreach’s Internet products, arguing it would discourage investment in faster services just as Openreach tries to advance a proposal for more full-fiber broadband. Liberty Global Plc’s Virgin Media has sided with BT, while Sky Plc and TalkTalk Telecom Group Plc say cutting rates will attract more customers to higher-speed services.
The rural broadband plan from BT would consider a range of technologies, including laying fiber to street cabinets and buildings, as well as fixed wireless solutions. Fixed coverage would be the priority and BT expects to complete the roll-out by 2021 or 2022.

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend