Partner Article
BT plan £50 million extension to fibre broadband rollout
BT says it will invest a further £50 million into the rollout of its fibre broadband programme across British cities in the next three years.
Although the telecoms provider has not confirmed locations yet, a spokesperson for the firm did not rule out extension of the network in the North East.
The works will become part of BT’s £3 billion project to provide fibre broadband to around 90% of the UK by 2015.
Areas that have previously missed out on fibre broadband coverage due to technical challenges could benefit from the new investment.
Mike Galvin, managing director of Network Investment at Openreach, said: “Our fibre programme is going extremely well with our engineers connecting homes and businesses across the UK. Some city areas have proved challenging in the past but we are returning to those and will pass hundreds of thousands of additional premises with fibre.
“We are reaching vast swathes of rural Britain with our public sector partners but we will upgrade these city areas under our own steam. Businesses in cities already have access to ultra-fast speeds but fibre will give them greater choice.
“The UK is already ahead of its main European rivals when it comes to fibre, and is set to race ahead thanks to the BDUK plans that are already in progress across the country.”
This was posted in Bdaily's Members' News section by Tom Keighley .
Enjoy the read? Get Bdaily delivered.
Sign up to receive our daily bulletin, sent to your inbox, for free.
OpenAI decision a wake-up call for our tech plans
Understanding the new Employment Rights Act
Why global conflict is a cyber risk for UK SMEs
Improving safety and standards in construction
From economic engine to community ecosystem
Improving North East transport will improve lives
Unlocking investment potential before year end
Give us certainty to deliver better homes
Hormuz: Safe passage - not insurance - the issue
Don't get caught out by employment law change
When literacy thrives, our businesses thrive too
Building a more diverse construction sector