Birmingham Post

City internet speeds on go-slow compared to others

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BIRMINGHAM’S full fibre internet speeds are lagging behind cities like Manchester, Liverpool, Wolverhamp­ton, Coventry and Sunderland, a new report claims.

Insufficie­nt infrastruc­ture has sparked fears lucrative tech investment­s could choose other major cities with faster connectivi­ty.

A council report on digital connectivi­ty claims the West Midlands tech sector is expected to generate at least £2.7 billion for the local economy by 2025.

The region is reportedly home to 18,394 start-ups and more incubators and accelerato­rs than any other city outside London. While this is one of the fastest growing tech sectors in the country, the council is worried the region may not be able to capitalise on this without the right full fibre infrastruc­ture.

A council report named central Birmingham as an area with particular­ly poor fibre coverage as well as Hodge Hill, Northfield and Erdington. Perry Barr and Yardley wards have some of the best coverage.

It also calls for the council to build and deploy a ‘city spine’ full fibre network that will support the city with greatly enhanced internet speeds. Areas with less than 50 per cent full fibre coverage will be targeted first.

Last year the council approved Birmingham’s digital city roadmap a scheme aimed at boosting hyperconne­ctivity in the city, potentiall­y resulting in an extra £760 million through increased productivi­ty across businesses. Full fibre was identified in this scheme as a ‘significan­t game changer’ for the city.

The council’s plans come as the government pushes for gigabit broadband, download speeds of at least one gigabit-per-second, to be available nationwide by 2030.

The Treasury has allocated £5 billion to support the scheme, £1.2 billion of which has been spent already.

The report said: “Without the right infrastruc­ture, there is a risk that Birmingham will not attract the level of investment and not achieve the economic returns available.

“Birmingham is already lagging behind other cities that have taken proactive action to support economic growth by developing their full fibre infrastruc­tures (such as Sunderland, Coventry, Wolverhamp­ton, Liverpool, Manchester etc.).

“Extensive analysis has identified that Birmingham does not have the necessary levels of full fibre connectivi­ty across the city to deliver the outcomes in the council’s Levelling Up Strategy, increasing the pace and scale of growth.”

The cabinet voted in favour of a business case to improve full fibre connectivi­ty as well as utilise the council’s wide area network (WAN).

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