28
April
2021
|
08:00
Europe/Amsterdam

Cebr report shows Full Fibre broadband build could be a “gamechanger” for the East Midlands economy

New study reveals comprehensive rollout could support more than 70,000 new workers

Openreach’s Regional Partnership Director for the East Midlands, Kasam Hussain, today welcomed the findings of a report conducted by the Centre for Economics and Business Research (Cebr) which shows that a comprehensive Full Fibre network in the region could enable 70,000 new people to enter the region’s workforce.

The report, commissioned by Openreach, also reveals that a nationwide rollout would also allow around 24,000 people in the East Midlands to expand the hours they are able to work if they wanted. And helping carers, parents and over-65s to access employment could contribute £1.8 billon in gross value added to the local economy.

Kasam Hussain commented: “This report illustrates just how game-changing the roll out of Full Fibre broadband across the East Midland’s rural and remote communities could be.

“The pandemic has reinforced public recognition of the importance of high-quality broadband and we’re clear that fibre has a significant part to play in the region’s recovery.

“The Cebr findings show accelerating the build would pay huge dividends to the East Midlands economy as a whole and be instrumental in bringing people back into the workforce who haven’t previously had the ability to navigate other commitments or find opportunities in their local area.

Cebr’s previous research explained the economic windfall in store for the UK with a nationwide upgrade – including a £59 billion boost to productivity - £3.5bn of this in the East Midlands. And this updated report highlights how Full Fibre can help to level up the UK, bringing up to more than 70,000 people back into the workforce in our region. This an opportunity we can’t afford to ignore.”

Openreach is investing millions of pounds on a Full Fibre rollout to dozens of towns and cities in the region, including many in the hard-to-reach ‘final third’. Build is already underway in the city areas of Derby, Northampton and Nottingham, as well as harder to reach locations including Bourne and Sleaford in Lincolnshire, Daventry and Towcester in Northamptonshire and Swadlincote and Buxton in Derbyshire.

In December last year, Openreach announced it was creating 2,500 new roles and an estimated 2,800 roles with partners to support the UK-wide Full Fibre build, including 140 new roles in the East Midlands.

Openreach already employs more than 34,500 people, including more than 25,000 engineers who build, maintain and connect customers to its nationwide broadband network. Of these, more than 1,600 live and/or work in the East Midlands.

This short video explains what Full Fibre technology is and you can find out more about our Fibre First programme here.