Carmarthen Journal

Leaders approve £55m

- RICHARD YOULE Senior Local Democracy Reporter richard.youle@walesonlin­e.co.uk

A £55 MILLION investment in digital connectivi­ty has been approved by leaders in the Swansea Bay City Region.

It will allow quality digital services to be delivered over wireless or fixed line networks.

For businesses this may result in more opportunit­ies and higher productivi­ty.

It should accelerate innovation in how health and education services are delivered.

Householde­rs, especially those in rural areas, should have faster access to all things digital. Ultimately it’s about growing the economy, creating jobs and improving what’s referred to as digital inclusion.

The digital infrastruc­ture project for Swansea, Neath Port Talbot, Carmarthen­shire and Pembrokesh­ire will now go for final approval to the Welsh and UK Government­s.

Introducin­g the project at a meeting of the Swansea Bay City Region joint committee - comprising local public and private sector representa­tives - programme manage r

Ga re th

Jones said it was basically a five-year investment in connectivi­ty. Identifyin­g and maximising uses for that connectivi­ty, he said, was key.

“Infrastruc­ture is great, but infrastruc­ture on its own is completely useless,” he said. “It’s what you do with that infrastruc­ture and that connectivi­ty.”

Just under half the £55 million will be spent improving internet access for rural homes and businesses, while £20 million will improve connectivi­ty further in the region’s main urban areas and developmen­t zones.

The remaining £9.5 million will help provide 5G wireless technology in certain locations which, it is hoped, will attract businesses.

The report before the joint committee said Wales had the biggest urban-rural divide for 4G coverage in the UK.

Ca rma r t h e n s h i re Council Leader Emlyn Dole said the rural ambition was stated clearly in the regional project.

He said the roll-out of

“enabling technology” was “absolutely essential”.

Cllr Dole said that according to telecommun­ications billionair­e and former chairman of the city region board, Sir Terry Matthews, the digital project was more important than any new road or building.

Mr Jones said the region still had 22,000 premises which could not access superfast broadband, and that faster full fibre broadband was limited.

Even Swansea, he said, was “not where it should

The quality of digital infrastruc­ture in South West Wales is currently lagging behind other parts of the UK though, so this programme will help close that gap by acting as a springboar­d for a superconne­cted city region with equality of access to broadband throughout our rural communitie­s

Carmarthen­shire Council leader Emlyn Dole

be” in terms of its connectivi­ty compared to other cities in the UK.

Mr Jones said he had received a lot of feedback about the project, and that there had been several conversati­ons with Welsh and UK Government officials who had given a “significan­t steer in the business case”.

Chris Foxall, interim chairman of the city deal economic strategy board, which acts as the voice of the private sector, said the challenge had been to make the project more ambitious.

“We need to articulate what the opportunit­ies are,” he said. “We are certainly committed to steer this forward, and make introducti­ons to companies and investors where necessary.”

The Welsh and UK Government­s will be asked for £25 million of the £55 million propositio­n, with the rest coming from the private sector and regional public sector bodies.

City deal leaders are forecastin­g it could generate £318 million over 15 years.

Speaking after the meeting, Cllr Dole said: “The importance of world-class digital connectivi­ty can’t be overstated.

“It’s fast-becoming the fourth utility, which underpins so much of daily life nowadays - from contact with family and friends to controllin­g our homes and supporting businesses in all sectors to drive productivi­ty and enable innovation.

“The quality of digital infrastruc­ture in South West Wales is currently lagging behind other parts of the UK though, so this programme will help close that gap by acting as a springboar­d for a superconne­cted city region with equality of access to broadband throughout our rural communitie­s.”

 ?? Image: PA Photo/thinkstock­photos ??
Image: PA Photo/thinkstock­photos

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