Information Age: News, analysis & insight for IT & business leaders

Ofcom calls on BT to open ‘unoccupied’ network

25 March 2010  

Telco’s duct and telegraph pole infrastructure could support more cabling, says comms watchdog

Communications regulator Ofcom has revealed that BT’s underground and overhead cabling infrastructure could support significantly more network capacity than is currently used.

Ofcom called on the telco to make this unoccupied space available to its competitors, so that they might build super-fast broadband services (defined by Ofcom as enabling download speeds of at least 24Mbps) without the need to build their own physical infrastructure.

In a report published yesterday, Ofcom said that around half of BT’s duct network – underground pipes through which much of its cabling runs – has space for more cables. It added, however, that “availability is highly variable across the country and the practicalities of using BT's ducts and poles have yet to be worked through." Ofcom’s report also found that 85% of telegraph poles could support new cables.

A story in the Financial Times earlier this year claimed that BT was willing to let competitors lay cable in its duct network to support super-fast broadband. And earlier this month, the Times report that BT had called on Virgin Media to open up its duct infrastructure.

The watchdog will issue new rules governing infrasructure sharing later this year. “At this early stage in the development of super-fast broadband, other communications companies indicate that they may prefer initially to be able to deliver services over BT’s network rather than build their own," it said this week.

"Therefore we propose that BT should make wholesale virtual unbundled local access (VULA) available to other communications companies on the same basis as to itself."

In yesterday’s budget speech, Chancellor Alastair Darling confirmed the government’s plan to levy a 50p monthly tax on landlines, which he said would “unlock private investment and enable 90% of the country to access the next generation of superfast broadband by 2017.”


Comments 

There are currently no comments on this article

People who read this also read...

Red Hat tops off bumper year with 44% profit jump

Strong increases in both full-year and quarterly net income and revenue as open source enterprise software vendor capitalises on recessionary climate

Digital economy takes centre stage at budget

Budget introduces 50p landline duty, £2.5bn small business innovation fund and promises 20,000 new university places

Sun takeover boosts Oracle sales but hits profits

Acquisition costs cut profit, but Larry Ellison's characteristic bombast is unbowed as he sets SAP in his sights

Google ends censorship of China search results

Search engine company risks wrath of Chinese authorities by enacting its promise to end self-censorship

Cisco gives WiMax a boost with Smart Grid investment

In danger of being eclipsed by LTE in telephony, WiMax may have found its “killer app” in intelligent power infrastructure

 

White Papers

Read article

11 Hiring Trends for 2011

In this document, you'll get the insider info you need to give potential employers what they want and beat your competition in 2011. You'll learn about the most valuable certifications and the game-changing skills that can lead to more job security and stability.

Read article

12 Hiring Manager Secrets to Getting the IT Job You Want

Learn how you can make yourself a more attractive candidate now with PrepLogic's free 12 Hiring Manager Secrets to Getting the Job You Want.

Read article

1Z0-040 Oracle Database 10G New Features for Administrators Practice Exam

Oracle 9i administrators can certify on Oracle 10G by passing this exam. The ExamForce 1Z0-040 Oracle Database 10G New Features for Administrators practice exam provides their unique triple testing mode to instantly set a baseline of your knowledge and focus your study where you need it most.

More
Advertisement
div class="banner">