BT fibre rollout to finish a year early
By Tom Brewster,
BT today announced its fibre rollout would be finished a year early, meaning two-thirds of the UK will be able to access superfast speeds by 2014.
The telecoms giant will recruit another 520 engineers, many of whom will be ex-army personnel, and invest an extra £300 million to finish the project a year in advance.
BT previously pledged to cover two-thirds of the UK with fibre capabilities by 2015 as the Government hopes to make the country the best-connected nation in Europe by that year.
We’re announcing this now because we are in a position to do so having made very good progress to date.
In May, the provider announced plans to bring in 200 ex-army staff for its fibre project. The 520 additional engineers announced today will be permanent, BT confirmed.
“We’re really pleased to be recruiting so many ex-armed services personnel,” a BT spokesperson said. “They’ve served their country well and deserve the chance of full-time employment with a generous reward package. They’re also highly skilled, motivated and disciplined and they have experience of complex engineering tasks in challenging environments. Given that experience, we’ll be able to train them up quickly and get them straight out where we need them.”
The telecoms giant told IT Pro it was still going to deliver the rollout within its capex guidance of £2.6 billion spending per year.
It also denied the UK was lagging behind other nations such as South Korea and Sweden, which have strong fibre deployments. BT believes the rollout is one of the fastest in the world.
“We’re announcing this now because we are in a position to do so having made very good progress to date,” the spokesperson added.
“We’re learning all the time and many small innovations (micro-trenching, power supply solutions, etc.) have made a difference in enabling us to go faster than other countries. The recruitment of more engineers will help.”
Last week, the UK was placed 25th in the global broadband speed rankings from Akamai. Only 30 per cent of UK broadband connections are above 5Mbps, according to the report. In The Netherlands, 68 per cent of the country receive equivalent speeds or faster.
BT is hoping to work with the public sector to take fibre to the final third of the UK and will be bidding for a slice of the Government’s £530 million Broadband Delivery UK (BDUK) fund alongside other ISPs.
In a bid to boost speeds across the UK, BT recently announced its Fibre to the Premises (FTTP) product, pledging it will offer downstream speeds of 300Mbps by spring next year.
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Rubbish.
This isn't an article, its a press release. The bt fibre rollout is only to street cabinets. The majority of people will still be on the phone lines and not on fibre. There will still be lots who can't get more than a meg if they are lucky. Have you not got any tech reporters on itpro?
By cyberdoyle on Wednesday Nov 16
Is it though?
Hi there cyberdoyle. Is this really just a press release? Did the press release have the quotes we got from the BT spokesperson? Did the press release have any information on Britain being comparatively slow on broadband? No. This is not a press release. And the BT rollout isn't just to cabinets - they've just announced their Fibre to the Premise product, as noted in the final paragraph. But yes, many people, in rural areas in particular, will still get rubbish speeds. It is something that needs addressing and is something the industry has been squabbling over recently. Tom Brewster - Senior Staff Writer.
By TomSBrewster on Thursday Nov 17
Maybe that means....
... That they can install the fibre service they promised would be rolled out in March 2011 (that's 12 months ago).
Maybe they're researching temporal dynamics as a way of delivering on time.
By Stoatwblr on Monday Mar 19