FutureScot
Connectivity

£16m broadband boost to benefit 54,000 Scottish homes

Fibre engineers Jodine Crombie and Lucy Kennedy are pictured at work on a new full fibre connection for a household in Hazel Gardens, Lanark, watched by Robert Thorburn, Openreach partnership director for Scotland/Supplied

A £16.2 million funding boost means that 54,000 homes and businesses across Scotland are set to benefit from “ultrafast” broadband connectivity.

The investment by telecoms giant Openreach will see a gigabit-capable, full fibre network rolled out to the majority of premises in eight Scottish areas: Stirling and Bridge of Allan; Kirkcaldy, Dysart and North Glenrothes in Fife; Carnoustie and Monifieth in Angus; and Gourock in Inverclyde.

It follows plans announced by the digital network provider last year for nearly a million more Scottish homes and businesses to be given access to its new gigabit-capable network, including 300,000 in rural and harder-to-serve areas.

The build has now passed more than 530,000 properties across Scotland, including 20,000 business premises, in places like Aviemore, Aberdeen and Ardrossan.

The news has been welcomed by the Scottish Government.

Economy secretary Kate Forbes said: “This is great news for Scotland. Commercial build continues to play a crucial role in helping ensure homes and businesses across the country can access fast, reliable, future-proofed broadband connectivity.

Bringing full fibre broadband to more urban and rural communities will help protect livelihoods and ensure people remain connected while we continue to recover from the effects of the global pandemic.

“With 54,000 more premises set to benefit from gigabit capable speeds, I look forward to seeing where Openreach goes to next.”

Robert Thorburn, Openreach’s partnership director for Scotland, said: “Nobody in Scotland is building full fibre faster, further or at a higher quality than Openreach. Full fibre is the gold standard in gigabit broadband and more future-proof than other technologies.

“We’re reaching more communities than ever and our highly-skilled engineers, alongside our build partners, are working hard to deliver some of the fastest and most reliable broadband available anywhere in Europe.

“In 2021 our engineers built around 770 metres of new broadband cables every minute – making ultrafast broadband available to another home every 13 seconds. We’ve already reached more than half a million Scottish homes and businesses, but we know there’s more to do – and we’re committed to doing it.”

Dr Liz Cameron, director and chief executive of Scottish Chambers of Commerce, added: “This is a great investment and roll-out by Openreach.  Expanding gigabit-capable full fibre broadband to more businesses, homes and locations is exactly the type of infrastructure investment Scotland needs.

“Digital connectivity is embedded into every aspect of our lives, more so now than ever before, and this latest milestone means more communities will be able to access faster, reliable and more consistent speeds.”

Full fibre broadband is up to 10 times faster than the average home broadband connection and around five times more reliable than the traditional copper-based network, providing more predictable, consistent speeds.  

Across Scotland, 124,000 homes and businesses have already ordered a full fibre service from a range of retail service providers using the Openreach network. But another 406,000 could be benefiting and have yet to upgrade.

Research by the Centre for Economics and Business Research(Cebr) highlighted the clear economic benefits of connecting everyone in Scotland to full fibre, estimating it would create a £4.6 billion boost to the local economy.

Openreach has vowed to invest billions of pounds to reach a total of 25 million UK premises by the end of December 2026, including more than six million in the hardest-to-serve parts of the UK defined by industry regulator Ofcom.

You can find out more about Openreach’s ‘fibre first’ programme, latest availability and local plans here.

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