The Future of
Broadband is in the
    Community
   Malcolm Corbett, CEO
Community Broadband Network
Community Broadband UK
  • CBN established in 2004

  • Approx 200 local groups assisted

  • Delivering connectivity and services
    in the toughest areas

  • Mainly providing fixed wireless
    access

  • Mix of Social Enterprises & SMEs

  • Rural & urban projects
What Did These Schemes Achieve?



              From …. 60%                     nd
                                        st dba
                                      mo roa
                                   e
                                th of b
                            ins ey
                          ma urv
                      t re l s
                    or i99.8% ***
             Toep….t ona
                 r
              6 e na
           200 siv
       N ’s hen
     CB mpre ts’
      co tspo*** Read the Small Print
       ‘no
The Next Generation Broadband Dilemma
                                               • New services need far higher
                                                 speeds to deliver video content
                                                 for business & entertainment
                                               • Current telecoms network can
                                                 support this for only 50% of UK
                                                 population
                                               • Rural areas & poor urban areas
                                                 will be left behind
                                               • Investment required for NGA in
                                                 UK estimated at £5bn (FTTC) to
                                                 £30bn (FTTH)
Broadband Stakeholder Group report into Next
      Generation broadband, April 2007
Top down
                     National Roll-out

                                                 “No business
                                         £30bn      case”




  Cu                                                Fibre
             Bottom up Community Coordination
                      Organise demand
                  Build the Investment case
                 Develop Practical examples

£30bn is a big number … £1500 per household / business is not


                                                    t
The Patchwork Quilt is Growing
In September Francesco Caio reported

                                             In the short term, the case for a
                                             major Government
                                             intervention is weak …

                                             … but government should act
                                             now to support investment
                                             in NGA
Francesco Caio speaking at the Next Gen 08
 Conference, Manchester, November 2008


Create the conditions to favour the development of new investment models
Establish standards for local NGA developments
Direct Government support towards open access networks
Digital Britain Final Report

 The Next Generation Fund
 A supplement of 50p on all fixed lines

 Support for Localised Projects
 Support their capacity, scale and expertise
 Support the Independent Networks Co-operative
 Association (INCA)
Alston, Cumbria
  A Small Market Town
Alston & Alston Moor
•   938 households
•   Population density = 24 homes per km2
•   National average = 377 homes per km2
•   The most sparsely populated parish in
    England

    Consequently the last place where NGA
    is do-able…

                          … or is it?
Daniel Heery, Director Alston
Cybermoor
Operator of the local community wireless
broadband network connecting 35% of local
homes and businesses
Offering community, health and business
services
Transforming ‘Cybermoor’ into ‘Fibremoor’,
aiming to connect 100% of homes to next gen
fibre and wireless
A rural community-led project
A Next Gen Network for Alston
• 100% of homes covered
• Up to 100Mbps symmetric service
• Cost per home - £2900
• No price premium over copper services




                                         w!
• Investment case based on




                                      no
   – Long term financing




                                    gn
   – Community engagement




                                  gg
                                Di
   – Limited public subsidy
Glasgow: West Whitlawburn Housing Co-op
• 500 households in a very
                                   poor community

                                 • Building 100 new properties

                                 • Installing p2p fibre

                                 • Launched Whitcomm, a new
                                   co-op to manage the
                                   service, at the Scottish
                                   Parliament in November

                                 • The first fibre connections
                                   go live in February 2009

                                 • An urban housing led project
Mike Appleford & Anne Anderson
Open Network E-Manchester
             E-M
• Revised indicative coverage
     • Pilot project to connect 500-1000 homes and
       businesses to fibre
     • £0.5m funding approved by NWDA in November
       2008, tenders being prepared
     • Includes some of the poorest areas of the city
     • Aiming to create a ‘Living Lab’ testbed for new
       applications and services
     • Setting up a community co-op to organise
       services
     • A public sector regeneration-led project
A project to address these questions:
What is the potential for communities to
raise the sums needed to invest in NGA?
Are there sustainable business models?
What methods can be used to engage
communities and deliver projects to meet
their needs?
The digital revolution lies at heart of Britain’s success
 We must make sure own industries are competitive
 We must invest in the downturn for the future ... In
             technological infrastructure
The infrastructure of the future is the digital network
er
      e mb
R   em
    …
    The    Future of Broadband is in
              the Community

                    Thank You

                     Malcolm Corbett
                m.corbett@broadband.coop
                  www.broadband.coop

Malcolm Corbett

  • 1.
    The Future of Broadbandis in the Community Malcolm Corbett, CEO Community Broadband Network
  • 3.
    Community Broadband UK • CBN established in 2004 • Approx 200 local groups assisted • Delivering connectivity and services in the toughest areas • Mainly providing fixed wireless access • Mix of Social Enterprises & SMEs • Rural & urban projects
  • 4.
    What Did TheseSchemes Achieve? From …. 60% nd st dba mo roa e th of b ins ey ma urv t re l s or i99.8% *** Toep….t ona r 6 e na 200 siv N ’s hen CB mpre ts’ co tspo*** Read the Small Print ‘no
  • 5.
    The Next GenerationBroadband Dilemma • New services need far higher speeds to deliver video content for business & entertainment • Current telecoms network can support this for only 50% of UK population • Rural areas & poor urban areas will be left behind • Investment required for NGA in UK estimated at £5bn (FTTC) to £30bn (FTTH) Broadband Stakeholder Group report into Next Generation broadband, April 2007
  • 6.
    Top down National Roll-out “No business £30bn case” Cu Fibre Bottom up Community Coordination Organise demand Build the Investment case Develop Practical examples £30bn is a big number … £1500 per household / business is not t
  • 8.
  • 9.
    In September FrancescoCaio reported In the short term, the case for a major Government intervention is weak … … but government should act now to support investment in NGA Francesco Caio speaking at the Next Gen 08 Conference, Manchester, November 2008 Create the conditions to favour the development of new investment models Establish standards for local NGA developments Direct Government support towards open access networks
  • 10.
    Digital Britain FinalReport The Next Generation Fund A supplement of 50p on all fixed lines Support for Localised Projects Support their capacity, scale and expertise Support the Independent Networks Co-operative Association (INCA)
  • 11.
    Alston, Cumbria A Small Market Town
  • 12.
    Alston & AlstonMoor • 938 households • Population density = 24 homes per km2 • National average = 377 homes per km2 • The most sparsely populated parish in England Consequently the last place where NGA is do-able… … or is it?
  • 13.
    Daniel Heery, DirectorAlston Cybermoor Operator of the local community wireless broadband network connecting 35% of local homes and businesses Offering community, health and business services Transforming ‘Cybermoor’ into ‘Fibremoor’, aiming to connect 100% of homes to next gen fibre and wireless A rural community-led project
  • 14.
    A Next GenNetwork for Alston • 100% of homes covered • Up to 100Mbps symmetric service • Cost per home - £2900 • No price premium over copper services w! • Investment case based on no – Long term financing gn – Community engagement gg Di – Limited public subsidy
  • 15.
  • 16.
    • 500 householdsin a very poor community • Building 100 new properties • Installing p2p fibre • Launched Whitcomm, a new co-op to manage the service, at the Scottish Parliament in November • The first fibre connections go live in February 2009 • An urban housing led project Mike Appleford & Anne Anderson
  • 19.
  • 20.
    • Revised indicativecoverage • Pilot project to connect 500-1000 homes and businesses to fibre • £0.5m funding approved by NWDA in November 2008, tenders being prepared • Includes some of the poorest areas of the city • Aiming to create a ‘Living Lab’ testbed for new applications and services • Setting up a community co-op to organise services • A public sector regeneration-led project
  • 21.
    A project toaddress these questions: What is the potential for communities to raise the sums needed to invest in NGA? Are there sustainable business models? What methods can be used to engage communities and deliver projects to meet their needs?
  • 22.
    The digital revolutionlies at heart of Britain’s success We must make sure own industries are competitive We must invest in the downturn for the future ... In technological infrastructure The infrastructure of the future is the digital network
  • 23.
    er e mb R em … The Future of Broadband is in the Community Thank You Malcolm Corbett m.corbett@broadband.coop www.broadband.coop