The Scotsman

Highland broadband revolution

● Residents in Sutherland lend a hand to help connect network

- By MARTYN MCLAUGHLIN mmclaughli­n@scotsman.com

Ultrafast broadband is coming to some of the most remote parts of Scotland.

Residents in two Highland communitie­s are helping dig trenches in readiness for the new fullfibre technology which will transform the way we use the internet, with download speeds of up to 330Mbps, nearly a tenfold increase on the current UK average of 36.2Mbps.

Altnaharra and Skerray in Sutherland will be among the first areas to benefit.

It is the technology of the future, made possible by some old fashioned elbow grease.

Residents in some of Scotland’s most remote locations are helping to dig trenches in order to enjoy some of the fastest broadband speeds anywhere in the UK.

In what is an unlikely marriage of cutting edge telecommun­ications and hard graft, homeowners in isolated Highland communitie­s are helping to excavate soil to make way for ultrafast fibre.

The emerging technology, a vast improvemen­t on normal broadband, promises to transform the way we use the internet, with download speeds of up to 330Mbps, nearly a tenfold increase on the current UK average of 36.2Mbps.

Thanks to the use of full-fibre cables, instead of copper, it will allow people to download a two hour-long HD film in just 90 seconds. Crucially, it is also seen as a major boon for fragile rural economies.

As part of the rollout of the new network, which hopes to connect 12 million households by 2020, two such areas in Sutherland - Altnaharra and Skerray - will be among the first to benefit.

The installati­on of the network is being carried out by Openreach, a subsidiary of BT. It said the work in some of most northernmo­st communitie­s represents a crucial stage, which will inform its strategy over the coming years.

Clive Selley, the firm’s chief executive, said a “new concept” was being used in both areas, with new nodes from the main fibre spine being spun out in order to connect outlying properties.

He explained: “As our core fibre spines penetrate even deeper into rural Scotland, it brings new opportunit­ies to improve broadband speeds for remote communitie­s.

“The two pilot communitie­s will see their broadband speeds jump dramatical­ly, as well as improvemen­ts to their existing services, so this is a win-win situation.

“We’ll test how we can use the spines to reach very rural communitie­s, and the distances over which we can use fibre effectivel­y. Our learning from these innovative trials will inform our wider fibre strategy and could potentiall­y help us to reach other very remote communitie­s.”

Workers on Altnaharra estate are helping to dig in the new cable to 45 houses, with the cable laying - carried out to Openreach’s specificat­ions linking up to around 100 properties in the hamlet of Skerray. As well as increasing speeds, the work will address a high fault rate in Skerray where existing copper cables buried under a nearby beach have been damaged by lightning strikes.

It is expected both communitie­s will be connected to the new full-fibre network by the autumn.

Although ultrafast fibre is only available in a few locations across the country, a report by the comm uni ca scotland’s tions watchdog, Ofcom, found the majority of areas with the service enjoyed average download speeds of 300Mbps. Some areas, its Connected Nation study found, had speeds of up to 1000Mbps.

An ultrafast trial in parts of Edinburgh and Glasgow also went live earlier this month, allowing up to 16,900 households to sign up for the service.

 ??  ?? 0 Ultrafast broadband uses full-fibre cables, which allow for greatly increased download speeds compared to copper cables
0 Ultrafast broadband uses full-fibre cables, which allow for greatly increased download speeds compared to copper cables

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