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£1 billion next gen broadband initiative launched

by Scott Bicheno on 4 March 2010, 11:14

Tags: UK Government

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A billion here, a billion there

The government was determined to get at least some of its Digital Britain initiatives underway before the general election, and today it announced a new bureaucracy charged with rolling-out next generation broadband and gave it a billion quid to play with.

Broadband Delivery UK (BDUK) will apparently drive a commitment to deliver 2 Mbps broadband to every household by 2012. Funny, we thought BT had already pledged that a couple of years ago. It's also in charge of the £1 billion ‘next generation fund' that is earmarked to ensure next generation broadband (no download speed specified) reaches 90 percent of the country by 2017.

Last time we looked, Virgin Media was going to get cracking on a 100 Mbps service by the end of this year, so we must assume the majority of that public cash is going in that direction. Surely, in these impoverished times, the government wouldn't channel a billion of our precious pounds towards BT when Virgin seems to be doing just fine without any public largesse.

Stephen Timms, the Digital Britain minister, is using a government commissioned report called ‘An assessment and practical guidance on next generation access (NGA) risk in the UK' as the basis for state intervention in the broadband market.

"This report makes clear that without public intervention, some rural areas and less well-off communities will be left behind and unable to reap the economic, health and education benefits superfast broadband offers," said Timms.

"Our proposed £1 billion Next Generation Fund will help bring the benefits of super-fast broadband to more communities. We do not want to risk the digital gap widening, which is why we have put a team of experts in place to ensure further investment is targeted at those people without adequate access." 

The report reckons only 70 percent of the country will get next gen broadband if it's just left to the markets to sort out. In effect, the report is a lengthy justification of the broadband tax, which will provide the billion notes in question. We have to wonder how much of our money the government spent commissioning a report to rubber-stamp its plan to spend more of our money.

 



HEXUS Forums :: 8 Comments

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You'd think that after all the discussion, the idiots that run the country would have noticed by now that it's flaming well in debt up to the eyebrows.

First rules of getting out of holes …. stop digging.

We know we're facing large cutbacks in public services, not to mention in pubic sector staffing levels. We know just about every department is going to have to trim services, or trim staff, or both. And yet they're still coming up with innovative ways to waste taxpayer money.
So they're spending a billion pounds making a working service a bit better, when they could plough that money into the NHS or schools or something, somewhere people would really like to see change.
the whole idea of everyone having broadband is proposterous anyway…

broadband is a luxery, not a commodity… if people in “less well off” areas want broadband, they should save thier pennies and buy it, not get given it…

yet again, its the middle class that suffer…

Give the scrubbers stuff we have to pay for, using money they took off us…

I'm sure £1billion might go a long way to improve the outdated infrastructure already in place… rather than pledging to make eveyr household with broadband…

this makes me angry…
matty-hodgson
So they're spending a billion pounds making a working service a bit better, when they could plough that money into the NHS or schools or something, somewhere people would really like to see change.
Naw, see, they tried throwing limitless volumes of cash on the NHS and schools before everything went tits up, and that didn't work then either.

But still, the fact that they created an entire bureaucracy and threw 1 billion quid (which is now worth what 600 million quid was a few years ago) at something which isn't much of a problem reminds me just how hopelessly clueless Labour is.
So this money is only to get next gen broadband (whatever that means) to only 20% of the country if they think that 70% of the country will get it through general market advancements and their target is 90%. Seems quite silly really.

BT seem to be sorting stuff out anyway on the backend. This week i've been getting a peak download speed nearly double what I normally get, 700+KBps up from 400+KBps.