17
November
2021
|
12:44
Europe/Amsterdam

£61 million broadband boost for the East of England

176,000 more homes and businesses across the East of England are a step closer to a major broadband boost thanks to a £61m[1] investment by Openreach – the UK’s largest digital network provider, used by more than 660 service providers including the likes of BT, Sky, TalkTalk, Vodafone and Zen.

People living and working in more than 30 communities – including Felixstowe, Letchworth, Lowestoft and Stevenage - are due to be upgraded following the company’s latest build announcement, with a new, ultrafast, ultra-reliable ‘full fibre’ broadband network being built there.

The local news comes as the digital network provider announces it has reached more than 6 million homes and businesses across the UK with Ultrafast Full Fibre, more than 460,000 of them in this region.

The plans are a further boost for the region as they follow news earlier this year that around 740,000 homes and businesses would be getting access to Openreach’s new network, around half of them in rural and harder to serve areas.

Kieran Wines, Openreach’s regional director for the East of England, said: “Good connectivity is vital – whether it’s to work from home, access education and care services, or for gaming and streaming entertainment – and that’s why we’re investing across the UK to upgrade our network to 25 million premises.

“Nobody’s building faster, further or to a higher standard than Openreach, and we’ve already reached six million homes and businesses with ultrafast full fibre technology, including around 460,000 across the East of England. It’s proving popular as well, with around 25 per cent already choosing to start using it.

Our engineers and build partners are reaching more communities every week and we’re not just building in cities and urban areas. Many rural and hard to reach communities are already benefitting and we plan to reach many more in the coming months and years.”     

Across the UK, 1.3 million homes and businesses have already ordered a full fibre service from a range of retail service providers using the Openreach network. But this means 4.7 million more are yet to start benefiting from some of the fastest, most reliable broadband connections in the world and have yet to upgrade.

Recent research by the Centre for Economics and Business Research (Cebr) highlighted the clear economic benefits of connecting everyone in the East of England to full fibre. It estimated this would create a £5.4 billion boost to the local economy.

Openreach engineers have been working hard to make the technology available to as many people as possible throughout the UK and work will continue between now and 2026, with the full list of locations and timescales being updated regularly on the Openreach website

The company’s plans are fundamental to the UK Government achieving its target of delivering ‘gigabit capable’ broadband to 85 per cent of UK by 2025. The company plans to reach a total of 25 million premises by the end of December 2026, including more than six million in the hardest-to-serve parts of the country defined by industry regulator Ofcom.

Openreach employs more than 3,300 people across the East of England region and you can find out more about our Fibre First programme, latest availability and local plans here.


 


 

[1] Investment figure based on an average build cost of £350 per premises