The Sunday Guardian

NDA laid 248,000 km optical fibre in villages, UPA II only 350 km

The Manmohan Singh government launched the project under the National Optical Fibre Network on 25 October 2011.

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The previous UPA II government dithered badly on making rural India digital as it laid only 350 km of optical fibre in about two-and-a-half years. However, the Narendra Modi-led NDA government gave a major push to the project and laid over 248,000 km of optical fibre in the last three-and-a-half years. As a result, around 1 lakh gram panchayats, covering 3 lakh villages, are all set to roll out high-speed broadband services by this month’s end.

The Manmohan Singh government launched the project under National Optical Fibre Network (NoFN) on 25 October 2011. The target was to lay 3 lakh km of optical fibre across the country in order to connect 2.5 lakh gram panchayats. But by 2014, only 350 km of optical fibre was laid.

However, the Modi government relaunched the project under a new name, BharatNet, in 2015. As on 10 De- cember 2017, 2.48 lakh km (in 1.05 lakh gram panchayats) has been covered under the project, out of which 82,540 gram panchayats are ready to provide broadband services. The ministry hopes that 1 lakh gram panchayats, covering 3 lakh villages, will be operationa­l on BharatNet infrastruc­ture by December. As per Ministry figures, 2,072 km of optical fibre is being laid every week.

Interestin­gly, under the UPA II, the first deadline (of covering 3 lakh km) was De- cember 2013. However, due to a slow start, it was extended to December 2017. The NDA government is trying to make first phase of BharatNet operationa­l by this month end. The BharatNet network is capable of providing scaleable bandwidth of upto 1 GBPS.

Last month, the Ministry of Telecom, headed by Manoj Sinha, set the ball rolling for the second and final phase of BharatNet project with an outlay of Rs 34,000 crore to provide high speed broad net in all the panchayats by March 2019. Under the Bharat Net II, the government plans to connect 1.5 lakh gram panchayats through 10 lakh km of additional optical fibre and give brandwidth to telecom players for broadband and WiFi services in the rural parts of the country.

With optical fibre connectivi­ty now available in more than 1 lakh gram panchayats, the Ministry of Telecom has initiated discussion­s on delivering broadband-enabled citizen services in these locations. A national confer- ence was held in the capital last month with states and service providers. Telecom companies like Airtel, Reliance Jio, Vodafone and Idea have expressed interest in providing last mile connectivi­ty on Bharat Net infrastruc­ture. Airtel, Vodafone and Reliance Jio, in fact, handed over advance cheques to the government during the conference against the leasing of BharatNet infrastruc­ture.

While the Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited (BSNL) will roll out optical fibres in eight states—Assam, Haryana, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal, Jammu and Kashmir and Sikkim— the Power Grid Corporatio­n of India will do the work in Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhan­d and Odisha under the second phase of BharatNet.

Minister of State for Telecommun­ications Manoj Sinha said the ministry took several steps to increase the pace of the project. “We smoothened the process of equipment procuremen­t by decentrali­sing it. In July this year, the Union Cabinet approved a strategy involving states along with Central public sector undertakin­gs and private sector, in order to make a win-win situation. States are important stakeholde­rs as the broadband can be used for citizen centric services based on e-governance model,” he said, adding “BharatNet will bring about a new era of connectivi­ty and empowermen­t and will help India become fully digital.”

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