Department for Culture, Media and Sport
The journey to work for millions of commuters across the UK has been improved thanks to free Wi-Fi having been installed on buses and trams as part of the Governments SuperConnected cities initiative.
More than three million unique users are making regular use of the service, using the freely available Wi-Fi to grab the latest news headlines, check the weather, browse the Internet, send emails and use social media on their daily commute.
Hundreds of buses, trams and trains in nine cities across the UK (Leeds, Bradford, Oxford, Manchester, Salford, York, Edinburgh, Cardiff and Newport) have been equipped with free public Wi-Fi. The latest usage figures highlight the schemes popularity.
Free Wi-Fi is now available on:
- 24 Trains and a similar number of buses in Leeds and Bradford (with more than 600,000 unique users now using the service)
- 713 buses and 27 trams in Edinburgh (2.6 million unique users)
- 112 buses in Newport (more than 25,000 unique users)
- 224 buses in Cardiff (almost 90,000 unique users)
- 116 buses and trams in Greater Manchester (more than 265,000 users per month)
- 80 buses in York (almost 20,000 unique users)
- Almost 300 buses in Oxford (more than 100,000 users)
Digital Economy Minister Ed Vaizey said:
The rollout of free Wi-Fi on public transport has been a tremendous success and Im delighted that so many people are making use of it. Installing free Wi-Fi on public transport is one of the ways were boosting connectivity across our cities and making sure the UK is properly equipped to meet the increasing demands of the digital age.
As well as providing free public Wi-Fi on public transport, the Superconnected Cities programme saw free public Wi-Fi installed in more than 1,000 buildings in 22 cities across the UK. The programme was designed to help cities develop the digital infrastructure they to remain internationally competitive and attractive places to invest, visit and do business.