Daily Mail

Broadband set to be pumped into homes through the water pipes WORLD WIDE WET!

- By Paul Revoir Media Editor

PUT that in your pipe and download it – cables for highspeed broadband are to set to be run through water pipes to connect hard-to-reach homes, ministers have revealed.

They are looking at a project called Fibre in Water to speed up the expansion of ‘lightning-fast broadband’ and mobile coverage in rural areas.

Innovators are being offering £4million to test the method, which it is hoped could be a cheaper and quicker way to get fibre-optic cables into homes, businesses and mobile masts.

The plan for gigabit-capable broadband has the benefit of avoiding the disruption of digging up roads and land for cables.

As much as 80 per cent of the industry costs of building new broadband and networks can be taken up with paying for ‘civil works’ such as installing ducts and poles, say officials.

It is hoped this scheme could ‘turbocharg­e’ a £5billion plan to level-up broadband access in areas which are hard to reach. The project is set to conclude in March 2024, with the final year examining if any solutions could be used throughout the country.

Digital infrastruc­ture minister Matt Warman said: ‘The cost of digging up roads and land is the biggest obstacle telecoms companies face when connecting hard-to-reach areas to better broadband. But beneath our feet there is a vast network of pipes reaching virtually every building in the country.

‘So we are calling on Britain’s brilliant innovators to help us use this infrastruc­ture to serve a dual purpose of serving up not just fresh, clean water but also lightning-fast digital connectivi­ty.’

In addition, the project will look at trying to reduce the amount of water lost to leaks, currently about 20 per cent of what goes into the public supply.

Sensors will be put into pipes, enabling water companies to deal more rapidly and accurately with leaks. The Government is already looking at helping the push for ‘next-generation broadband’ by letting telecoms companies access one millionplu­s miles of undergroun­d utility ducts, such as electricit­y, gas and sewer networks. Stephen Unger, commission­er at the Geospatial Commission, an expert group which is part of the Cabinet Office, welcomed the Fibre in Water project.

‘The best way to meet this challenge is to use existing infrastruc­ture, such as the water pipes that already reach every home and business in the country,’ he said.

‘Our ambition must be for reliable broadband to become as easy to access tomorrow as drinking water is today.’ Any testing of feeding cables into pipes has to be approved by the Drinking Water Inspectora­te before being used.

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