17
July
2017
|
16:33
Europe/London

Openreach seeks support to future-proof digital Britain

Summary

Consultation launched to build the case for a new, large-scale ‘full fibre’ broadband network

Openreach, Britain’s digital network business, today called for greater industry and political collaboration to build a large-scale ‘full fibre’ broadband network which would help secure the future competitiveness of the UK for decades and strengthen its position as the leading digital economy in the G20.

The business, which provides phone and broadband infrastructure to around 30 million homes and businesses via more than 580 Communications Provider (CP) customers, has launched a consultation with CPs, and is engaging further with government and the regulator Ofcom, to identify whether there’s widespread demand for a large-scale ‘full fibre’ – also known as Fibre-to-the-Premises (FTTP) – network, capable of delivering more reliable service and Gigabit speeds.

It will also assess the likely benefits across industry of such a major infrastructure deployment and seek support for the crucial enablers needed to make a commercial investment case viable.

The enablers that Openreach believes are necessary to unlock larger scale FTTP deployment include:

  • greater collaboration, including new investment, risk and cost sharing models
  • agreement on how mass migration of customers onto the new platform can be achieved
  • reducing logistical barriers, like improved planning and traffic management processes
  • agreement on the right way to spread the costs of a FTTP investment
  • a legal and regulatory environment which encourages investment

Clive Selley, Chief Executive of Openreach said: “We’re determined to continue our investment in the infrastructure Britain needs to support our thriving digital economy and we want to build a much larger full fibre network, so we need to work closely with Communications Providers, government and Ofcom to achieve that.

“By using new techniques, we recently halved the cost of delivering ‘full fibre’ infrastructure, but building a large-scale network is still a huge commercial, technical and logistical challenge that’s going to need real ingenuity, flexibility and coordination across government and industry.

“With the right conditions we believe we could make FTTP available to as many as 10 million homes and businesses by the mid-2020s, but we need to understand if there’s sufficient demand to justify the roll-out, and support for the enablers needed to build a viable business case. That includes removing barriers to investment and incentivising those, like Openreach, who are prepared to take a commercial risk.”

Full fibre networks are typically more stable, efficient and reliable with customers experiencing fewer faults and more predictable speeds than a hybrid copper and fibre broadband technology. They can also support broadband speeds of up to 1Gbps, which is enough to download an entire HD TV programme in five seconds. However, such networks are also much more expensive and operationally complex to deploy, making the commercial case more challenging.

By drawing on the world class R&D teams at our labs in Suffolk, Openreach recently became the first business in the world to demonstrate 100Gbps speeds using its existing FTTP infrastructure, showing the potential such connections have to meet consumer and business demand for decades – even for applications that can’t be anticipated today.

Openreach is already working towards an ambition of making ultrafast speeds of more than 100Mbps available to 12 million homes and businesses by the end of 2020 using a mixture of technologies. However, the business is keen to explore conditions which might allow it to invest in more ‘full fibre’ infrastructure.

Clive Selley added: “Over the last ten years, we’ve invested billions of pounds into our network and today it’s powering the leading digital economy in the G20. Faster internet access has radically improved people’s professional and personal lives and now we have the opportunity to accelerate that positive change and embrace the digital age ahead of us.”

“Full fibre broadband is faster, more reliable and simpler to maintain, and it has the potential power the UK’s economic success for a century, but it also requires a Victorian-scale vision, commitment and investment. The engineering, commercial and operational challenges are significant, but I believe that greater collaboration across the industry will help us to overcome them and build more Fibre-to-the-Premises infrastructure.”

ENDS

Notes to editors

About Openreach

Openreach is Britain’s digital network business.

We’re 30,400 people who connect homes, mobile phone masts, schools, shops, banks, hospitals, libraries, broadcasters, governments and businesses - large and small - to the world. Our mission is to build the best possible network, with the highest quality service, making sure that everyone in Britain can be connected.

We’re the platform for Britain’s thriving digital economy, which is the largest in the G20. We work on behalf of more than 580 communications providers like SKY, TalkTalk, Vodafone, and BT, and our fibre broadband network is the biggest in the UK, passing more than 26.5 million premises.

Over the last decade, we’ve invested more than £11 billion into our network and we now manage more than 158 million kilometres of cable stretching from Scotland to Cornwall, from Wales to the east coast. We’re continuing to take that network further - making superfast broadband speeds available to thousands more homes and businesses every week.

Openreach is a wholly owned and independently governed division of the BT Group, and it is a highly regulated business, with more than 90 per cent of its revenues generated from services that are regulated by Ofcom.

Any company can access our products under exactly the same prices, terms and conditions.

For the year ended 31 March 2017, we reported revenues of £5.1bn.

For more information, visit openreach.co.uk