Ofcom Promises 98 Percent Indoor 4G Coverage

Ofcom CEO Sharon White has pledged to ensure 98 percent of all homes and businesses in the UK can receive an indoor 4G signal by the end of 2017.

“We know mobile data is increasingly vital to businesses. So we’ve set rules to ensure that virtually all homes and offices – 98 percent – must receive an indoor 4G mobile signal by the end of next year,” she told the Federation of Small Business (FSB) National Conference in Glasgow. “That must include at least 95 percent of homes and offices in each UK nation – including Scotland.

“Providing 4G across the Highlands and Islands is more challenging, but no less important. Wherever Ofcom can help meet those challenges, we will. Today we are launching a consultation to increase the use of ‘mobile repeaters’ – devices that boost mobile signals.”

Better mobile coverage

EE, the UK’s largest 4G operator, currently covers 95 percent of the UK population with LTE – although this figure is for outdoor coverage. Small cells, femtocells, Voice over Wi-Fi (VoWi-Fi) and low frequency spectrum have all been touted as ways of ensuring a better signal indoors.

All four major operators have committed to invest a combined £5 billion to improve rural coverage as part of a legally-binding agreement to extend a basic voice and text service over 2G to 90 percent of the UK’s landmass by 2017. However full 4G coverage will only reach 85 percent by that time.

Prime Minister David Cameron recently hinted at the introduction of new legislation that would make it easier for operators to build masts and other mobile infrastructure, however Minister for the Digital Economy Ed Vaizey has told Parliament that the £150 million Mobile Infrastructure Project (MIP) had not been a success.

Small business broadband

The FSB has welcomed White’s comments, claiming the organisation’s own research suggests that even when small businesses get a decent connection, their superfast broadband or mobile service is often poorer than those received by large enterprises, preventing their ability to do more online.

Recent research suggested slow broadband costs small business employees 15 minutes every single day. The government has promised a business broadband review and there have been moves to raise the universal service obligation to 10Mbps.

“Large numbers of small firms are using new digital technology to revolutionise the way they do business, but the market is still not delivering for all and this is acting as a brake on the ambitions of many businesses,” said Mike Cherry, FSB policy director. “Ofcom clearly gets the importance of small businesses – but we need to keep up the pressure and help them to deliver.

“Poor quality of service is a major barrier to firms who want to do more online. Ofcom is right to focus on raising minimum standards and making it easier to navigate the market.”

Are you up to speed on 4G? Try our quiz!

Steve McCaskill

Steve McCaskill is editor of TechWeekEurope and ChannelBiz. He joined as a reporter in 2011 and covers all areas of IT, with a particular interest in telecommunications, mobile and networking, along with sports technology.

Recent Posts

Open Source Groups Warn Of Ongoing Attacks

Open source groups warn of sophisticated social engineering attacks targeting JavaScript and other critical projects

13 hours ago

Hong Kong Approves Bitcoin, Ether ETFs

Hong Kong financial regulator approves exchange-traded funds for Bitcoin, Ether as it seeks to become…

13 hours ago

Trump Media Shares Buckle Over Secondary Offering Plans

Shares in Donald Trump's social media company Trump Media plummet on Monday after company announces…

14 hours ago

Apple Loses Smartphone Crown To Samsung Amidst China Pressure

Apple cedes top smartphone sales spot back to Samsung in first quarter as China sales…

14 hours ago

Apple’s Tim Cook Visits Vietnam Amidst China Troubles

Apple chief Tim Cook visits Vietnam as company seeks to expand consumer sales, diversify manufacturing…

15 hours ago

US Awards $6.4bn To Samsung For Expanded Texas Chip Production

US awards $6.5bn to Samsung Electronics under Chips Act as it seeks to expand domestic…

23 hours ago