Department for Culture, Media and Sport
More than 2.5 million homes and businesses can now benefit from superfast broadband as a result of the Governments nationwide rollout.
Latest official statistics show that as of 31 March 2015 an additional 2,411,395 properties are now able to access superfast speeds thanks to the Governments 1.7bn investment programme.
This means that with the project now reaching an additional 40,000 homes and businesses every week, the 2.5 million mark has been well and truly passed, and is fast approaching the three million premises milestone.
Culture Secretary John Whittingdale said:
Access to superfast speeds has never been more important, in both our home and working lives. The Governments rollout of superfast broadband will make sure that rural homes and businesses are not left behind and that the UK is properly equipped to meet the challenges of the digital age.
Superfast broadband is currently available to more than 80 per cent of homes and businesses in the UK up from zero in 2009, and the Government funded rollout is on track to ensure 95 per cent of the UK has access to superfast broadband by the end of 2017.
Digital Economy Minister Ed Vaizey said:
Were rolling out superfast broadband at a terrific rate and were reaching another 5,000 homes and businesses every day. Many of the projects are ahead of schedule and were seeing more people upgrade to superfast broadband as it becomes available in their area.
This huge boost to the UKs connectivity is central to the Governments long-term economic plan, delivering a return of up to 20 for every pound invested. The UK already leads the EU big five nations when it comes to superfast access and take-up, and the programme will help make sure it stays ahead.
Gavin Patterson, BT Chief Executive, said:
The roll out of fibre broadband in rural areas is getting stronger with every month that passes. Homes and businesses are benefiting across the UK as our engineers work tirelessly to connect them to superfast broadband. This is a critical project that will make a real difference to peoples lives and help rural economies thrive across the UK.
Focus is now firmly placed on the hardest to reach areas that make up the final five per cent of the UK not covered by existing plans. The Government has already begun work on extending superfast coverage to these communities. A series of pilot projects exploring how alternative technologies could be used to tackle these difficult areas is currently underway and Government will publish the findings from the trials later this year.