BT Press Releases

DC09-306                                                                                                                                                   1st October 2009

Openreach to trial fibre-to-the-premise in brownfield sites 

openreach

Openreach – BT’s local access network division - today announced it is to trial fibre-to-the-premise (FTTP) technology in “brownfield” sites for the first time. The trials will begin in January 2010.

Two locations - Bradwell Abbey in Milton Keynes and Highams Park, London - have been selected for the trial, which will see speeds of up to 100Mb/s delivered to up to 20,000 homes and businesses in each area by March 2010. The trial products will be available to all UK communications providers on an open, wholesale basis.

The trial forms part of BT’s plans to deliver super-fast broadband speeds to 10 million premises by 2012, using a combination of FTTP and fibre-to-the-cabinet (FTTC) technology. The company has already pledged to make such services available to 1.5m homes by next summer.

Openreach is already delivering the highest residential broadband speeds in the UK at a “greenfield” housing development in Ebbsfleet Valley, Kent. Customers in this area are currently experiencing downstream speeds of up to 100Mb/s using FTTP technology.

Openreach will now trial FTTP to brownfield developments for the first time, to enhance its understanding of the performance of the technology and the economics involved when rolling out fibre directly to premises in areas where copper services are already available. 

A mix of FTTC and FTTP technologies will be deployed in BT’s super-fast broadband roll-out, with FTTC expected to be the most widely deployed technology. FTTC will deliver downstream speeds of up to 40Mb/s, potentially rising to more than 60Mb/s in the future.

Customers using both the FTTP and FTTC products will also receive the highest upstream speeds currently available in the UK, at up to 10Mb/s. These speeds are ideal for consumers or businesses wanting to send large files with rich graphics or upload pictures and videos in a fraction of the time that is possible using products with slower speeds.
 
David Campbell, Managing Director of Next Generation Access, Openreach, said, “This trial is crucial for informing our plans to consider deploying FTTP alongside FTTC. Our FTTP deployment in Ebbsfleet has allowed us to learn a great deal about rolling out fibre directly to homes in greenfield areas and we believe that the technology has huge potential for brownfield areas too. We’ve worked closely with communications providers and regional development authorities in selecting these sites for the FTTP brownfield trial, and I’d like to encourage as many communications providers as possible to get involved in the trial.”

Ends

Notes to editors:

Q. What do you mean by brownfield?
A. Areas of the UK where copper services are already provided directly to premises.

Q. What do you mean by greenfield?
A. Areas of the UK where there is no existing communications infrastructure present. These areas are usually new-build residential or business developments.

Q. What is FTTP?
A. Fibre-to-the-premise (FTTP) is a solution whereby fibre optic cable is deployed from the exchange directly into the customer premise supporting super-fast broadband. It delivers downstream speeds of up to 100Mb/s – and potentially up to 1000Mb/s in the future. Customers will also receive the highest upstream speeds currently available in the UK, at up to 10Mb/s.

Q. What is FTTC?
A. Fibre-to-the-cabinet (FTTC) is a solution whereby fibre optic cable is deployed from the exchange to the street cabinet with the remainder of the connection - from the cabinet to the premise - using copper wiring. This combination of fibre and copper can be used to support super-fast broadband with speeds of up to 40mb/s initially, potentially rising to 60Mb/s in the future. Customers will also receive the highest upstream speeds currently available in the UK, at up to 10Mb/s.
 
Q. What is the status of the FTTC pilot?
A. Currently there is an operational pilot running in Whitchurch, Cardiff and Muswell Hill, London, covering over 30,000 premises across the two locations. To date, seven UK communications providers are actively placing orders and further communications providers are expected to join the pilot later this year. Over 200 end user customers have been connected to date across these two pilot locations, while Openreach expects to connect thousands of end user customers across the two pilot sites by the end of this year.

Following the pilot, BT will start to roll-out super-fast broadband services to 1.5 million premises as part of its initial deployment of the technology. The roll-out will commence in January 2010 with 1.5 million customers connected by Summer 2010.