Project Gigabit Rural Areas 2024-11-20

2024-11-20

TAGS
Response quality

Questions & Answers

Q1 Partial Answer
Jerome Mayhew Con
Broadland and Fakenham
Context
Concerns about the potential impact of using Project Gigabit funding in urban areas on download speeds in rural areas. 11,500 houses will be connected to fibre as a result of the Conservative Project Gigabit policy.
What assessment has been made of the potential impact of using Project Gigabit funding in urban areas on download speeds in rural areas? There are 11,500 houses that will be connected to fibre as a result of the Conservative Project Gigabit policy. There is real concern that some of those will miss out if money is redirected from rural to urban communities.
Project Gigabit has always been designed to deliver gigabit-capable broadband to premises that will not be met by the market, regardless of whether they are in urban or rural areas. Most premises deemed uncommercial by the market are in rural areas, but consistent evidence suggests that we will also need to intervene in some urban areas to achieve full national gigabit coverage. Funding will continue to be provided where it is needed. The vast majority—more than 90%—of the spending in Project Gigabit has gone to rural areas because those are the areas most in need.
Assessment & feedback
Specific risk to rural communities missing out on connectivity improvements if funds are redirected to urban areas was not directly addressed.
Response accuracy
Q2 Partial Answer
Jerome Mayhew Con
Broadland and Fakenham
Context
Concerns about the potential impact of using Project Gigabit funding in urban areas on download speeds in rural areas. 11,500 houses will be connected to fibre as a result of the Conservative Project Gigabit policy.
There are 11,500 houses that will be connected to fibre as a result of the Conservative Project Gigabit policy. There is real concern that some of those will miss out if money is redirected from rural to urban communities. After the family farm tax, can we please give rural communities a break?
The vast majority—more than 90%—of the spending in Project Gigabit has gone to rural areas because those are the areas most in need. There is absolutely no change in our policy to that. However, some urban areas have significant problems as well and we need to rectify those.
Assessment & feedback
The specific concern about redirecting funding from 11,500 houses connected through Project Gigabit was not directly addressed with concrete reassurance.
Response accuracy