KC Trumps BT, With Fibre-To-The-Premise In Yorkshire

KC has revealed an ambitious fibre deployment in Hull and East Yorkshire that will wire thousands of people up to superfast broadband services. The local operator claims its fibre roll-out will make BT’s nationwide project look anemic.

KC is the local ISP and telecoms unit of KCOM Group Plc, the Hull-based group that used to be known as Kingston Communications, which was successfully floated on the stock market in 1999 (raising a lot of money for the local council in the process).

The Kingston Communications area is unique in the UK, because during the 20th century the region kept its independent telecom network while other regional telecom groups were gradually absorbed into the telephone department of the General Post Office (GPO) which of course went on to become BT.

Yorkshire Fibre

The Hull and East Yorkshire region, with its notable white telephone boxes, has its own independent telecoms network and has no local BT copper network. And now the company has decided to begin its own fibre deployment into its regions by the end of 2012, following a trial of the technology late last year.

Unlike BT’s fibre rollout which is mostly fibre to the cabinet (FTTC)-based, KC on the other is mostly focusing on the FTTP (fibre to the premise) deployment, which takes fibres right to homes and offices, and should means that KC’s fibre customers will enjoy substantially faster connections compared to BT customers on a FTTC-based network.

The initial KC fibre deployment will be to 15,000 homes & businesses in Hull and certain parts of East Yorkshire such as Beverley and several villages as well. Most of these connections will start to be installed in February, and they will be FTTP deployments, giving customers an extremely quick 100Mbps line speed.

“KC’s multi-million pound investment in its fibre rollout represents the latest step in the company’s ongoing commitment to providing broadband services that are amongst the best in the country,” boasted the ISP. “Locations have been selected to offer the company a spread of scenarios and demographics to inform future fibre deployment plans.”

Ambitious Roll Out

“We’ve embarked on this ambitious fibre roll-out to give our customers the best-connected homes and businesses in the UK,” said KCOM Group Executive Director Kevin Walsh.

“At the heart of our plan is an investment in the future of Hull and East Yorkshire that has the potential to transform the region’s fortunes and make us an attractive location for further public and private sector investment,” he said.

Consumer packages (KC Lightstream) will range from £25 to £43 per month, whereas business packages (KC Lightstream Business) will cost in the region of £25 to £100 per month, depending on speed, download allowances, support levels etc.

Tom Jowitt

Tom Jowitt is a leading British tech freelancer and long standing contributor to Silicon UK. He is also a bit of a Lord of the Rings nut...

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  • BT's Media Relations Director, Ross Cook got in touch to make the following points:

    1. BT does offer FTTP, albeit in a small footprint (for now)

    2. BT is planning to double FTTC speeds to up to 80Mbps

    3. BT shares its network with other ISPs, (unlike Kcoms), so customers outside the Kcom area get competition and may have lower prices.

    (Posted by Peter Judge, Editor)

    • 4. BT has no plans to roll out superfast fibre broadband to the largest Telephone Exchange, Tavistock in West Devon. (3 miles from Superfast Cornwall)

      • Tavistock already has residential ADSL2+ (unlike much of Devon), offering up to 24Mbps - though this will vary a lot depending on your distance from exchange and cabinet.

        Tavistock offers Ethernet services too, so businesses can get up to 1Gbps to connect their sites together nationally, and that goes up to 10Gbps for connections to local sites - Plymouth probably being 'local' by the way. I believe Ethernet products are intended as private links between business sites so not sure if they allow web access at these speeds though.
        See: http://business.bt.com/data-and-voice-networks/site-to-site/ethernet-private-circuits/

        By the way Superfast Cornwall I believe is part funded by the European Union and Cornwall council, and they were quick to get their act together to make sure their superfast project began as soon as possible.

        I'd fully expect Devon County Council to be involved in some kind of negotiations - but not just with BT - they will pick the company offering the best solution - and that seems to take some time to decide who. e.g. a simple search for bduk devon finds stuff like this: http://www.thinkbroadband.com/news/4942-devon-and-somerset-claim-to-be-ahead-of-bduk-game.html

        So keep your eyes peeled for announcements in the news, and even though news on BDUK might be slow in coming you never know BT might soon go to Tavistock before then anyway - keep updated here: http://www.superfast-openreach.co.uk/where-and-when/
        (no announced plans as I write though)

    • Are BT telling porkies again? The reality is, KC offer superb customer service, BT are complete rubbish.

  • KC, like BT, is required by OFCOM to share it's network with other operators, so BT are lying again!

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