Would-be fisherman’s net benefits to communities
AN ASPIRING lobster fisherman from the village of Achiltibuie in Ross and Cromarty sounds like an unexpected protagonist in Scotland’s ambition to be a global leader in high-speed digital connectivity.
But on closer inspection, Andrew Muir’s story makes sense.
“The place I’m from is what drives our interest in rural communities and the importance of connectivity,” said Mr Muir, chief executive and co-founder of Edinburgh-based telecoms consultancy Farrpoint.
“I was brought up in Achiltibuie, but left to go to university, like a lot of people who wanted to go on further.
“But now places like that are getting more opportunities to compete for people, because of connectivity.”
Since it was set up in 2007, Farrpoint has advised on more than £2 billion of investment in broadband networks, including enabling superfast broadband in 250 towns and villages across the Highlands and Islands.
“It’s essential to these communities,” Mr Muir said. “It supports everything that goes on, from school pupils being able to do their homework because they need internet access, to small businesses being able to trade online.
“People also need to access the internet for social reasons because everybody else is on it. It helps sustain communities and removes that barrier of distance to a certain extent. It lets people work remotely and it’s just considered an essential bit of infrastructure now.”
Farrpoint has already helped deliver high-speed broadband to one in four Scottish homes – 750,000 properties. It is now working with the
Scottish Government, through its infrastructure arm Scottish Futures Trust, to scope what infrastructure will be needed, and where, to deliver fifth generation “5G” mobile connectivity.
With speeds measured in gigabits per second, 5G is predicted to be hundreds of times faster than current 4G connectivity.
“5G will mean a faster, more responsive, more robust mobile experience,” Mr Muir said. “The mobile operators (O2, Vodafone, EE and Three) will launch 5G in the cities by themselves. But it’s how far we want to go beyond this and who’s going to pay for that. Quite possibly, some public sector money might be needed and, if that’s the case, we would be involved in helping public sector partners figure out what’s needed, where, and how it should be spent.”
5G will bring significant advances in connecting machines – as well as people. Sensors in lampposts or bins, for example, could be used to collect data and start delivering better applications for people.
“Sensors can monitor environmental conditions, like carbon emissions in the streets, or peatland conditions in the country” Mr Muir said.
“They can be used to make traffic lights more intelligent and react better to traffic flows. They can tell the council when bins need to be emptied; they can be used for intelligent parking, and to track livestock – and a whole range of uses not even invented yet. All of this connectivity underpins better services and applications for everyone.”
One of Farrpoint’s innovative projects has involved developing a mobile coverage checker that helps organisations measure mobile coverage in their areas.
“A number of local authorities are putting these systems in their bin lorries because they go down every street in a council area and can easily capture a true picture of mobile coverage,” Mr Muir said.
In another project involving 175,000 users, Farrpoint is working with the Scottish Government to develop the next generation of “telecare” support to connect people in their homes with remote care professionals using advanced technology.
“A lot of our work is about helping organisations understand and implement connectivity technology to help them deliver better services,” Mr Muir said. “We get real pleasure from the fact that what we do makes a difference, because it’s about improving connectivity to communities and businesses throughout Scotland. And once you’ve got connectivity in place, you can do all sorts of things.”
After a BSC in electrical and communication engineering at Napier University in Edinburgh, Mr Muir returned to Achiltibuie to be a lobster fisherman. “I was brought up with fishing and really enjoyed it. But then after about six months, I was told by my parents that I should really use my degree. So I moved down to BT’S research labs in the south of England, where I spent about a year. Then I moved back up to Aberdeen to do a PHD at Robert Gordon’s on microstrip antennas, a new type of antenna design that I contributed to.”
Mr Muir then spent five years as a network manager at Highlands and Islands Enterprise in Inverness, before moving into consultancy in 1995 with a global telecoms, media and digital services specialist. It was here he met his Farrpoint co-founders, Richard Parkinson and Calum Lamont.
“There are different types of consultancies and we wanted to add practical value in whatever we did and not just produce nice reports that sit on a shelf,” Mr Muir said.
From a starting point of three, the company has grown to 20 people across three offices in Edinburgh, Manchester and London. It has current revenues of around £2 million with significant growth plans ahead. Farrpoint opened its first international office in Canada last year and may look to the US thereafter.
“We want to retain our central position in Scotland, expand further across the rest of the UK and develop internationally,” Mr Muir said.