BT announces 178 additional fibre exchanges
By Tom Brewster,
BT has announced a raft of additional fibre exchanges as part of its major rollout initiative in the UK.
The extra exchanges cover a range of locations, with 17 getting a fibre upgrade in Cornwall as part of a major project in the county.
Significant investment is going into Scotland as well, where 34 exchanges will be upgraded.
Superfast broadband is already within reach of more than six million premises today.
BT claimed the exchanges would cover 1.8 million homes and businesses. In some areas, premises will be able to access speeds of up to 300Mbps, the telecoms provider said.
"We continue to make tremendous strides with our fibre programme. Superfast broadband is already within reach of more than six million premises today and we are on track to pass ten million premises next year," said Olivia Garfield, CEO of Openreach.
"Our ambitions do not stop there. We will make fibre available to two thirds of UK premises by the end of 2014 and we want to go even further. It is important that as many premises as possible have access to fibre and so we will bid for the BDUK (Broadband Delivery UK) funds that are available."
Despite claims that BT would be able to provide 50 per cent of homes with fibre in 2012, the telecoms giant told IT Pro its target was still 40 per cent.
The company admitted certain premises in the fresh exchanges' areas would not be able to access fibre, due to "the current network topography, and the economics of deployment."
A BT spokesperson suggested these unlucky few could be supplied by other means.
"The alternative solutions would include things like LTE, whitespace and Avanti (satellite) in Cornwall," the spokesperson added.
BT said once the exchanges revealed today have been completed, alongside others recently announced, the company would have completed 80 per cent of its rollout. The provider wants to reach two-thirds of the UK using its own money.
BT believes 90 per cent of the UK could be covered within five to six years if further public and private investment were released.
The UK's fibre rollout has been far from smooth, however. Last month, Geo Networks, which was helping deliver superfast networks in Wales in partnership with the Welsh Assembly, said it was going to withdraw bidding for Government-provided BDUK funds and in all next-generation access sales.
Geo claimed the market was "not contestable." Two key reasons for Geo's decision surrounded BT's pricing for Physical Infrastructure Access (PIA) and "heavy restrictions" over what can be done with infrastructure.
Indeed, PIA pricing in rural areas has been the biggest barrier for the rollout, with a host of providers claiming BT is charging too much for the wholesale Openreach product. BT believes its PIA pricing is 38 per cent below the European average for access in rural areas.
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Speed !!!
300MB/sec would be nice - but BT cannot even get me 2MB/sec. They should be resolving that problem, and not getting the speed up for those in cities who can get 8MB/sec and more.
By hillcf on Tuesday Dec 13
Amazing...
Well BT might be saying this however it bears little resemblance to the actual availability does it? I'm in North London and when I got the sales ploy it was going to be ready end December 2011. In fact for months it shows end of March 2012. How about just getting on with job less the 'hot air' comments?
M
By searcher_n3 on Wednesday Dec 14
Super Fast?
What is meant by superfast broadband? Shouldn' it be super rate instead? After all, all broadband messages travel at or near to the speed of light - nothing can travel any more quickly!
By viclud on Wednesday Dec 14
Whilst quietly pushing back rollout dates
Several exchanges have quietly had their published rollout dates pushed back 3 months to March 2012, and now another 3 months to June 2012.
I guess it's one way to hide the man behind the curtain...
By Stoatwblr on Wednesday Jan 4