Rural broadband speeds are less than half of those in cities and towns, according to the Labour Party, which has accused the government of neglecting rural communities.
Labour’s stats are based only on homes with at least some sort of Internet connection and found that a quarter of premises in the UK received less than 2Mbps. The average speed in urban areas was 14.6Mbps, compared to just 5.9Mbps in rural areas.
This is despite a £48 million project in Northern Ireland to deliver superfast broadband to 95 percent of premises in the country. Only 18 percent of potential customers choose to receive the service, leaving rural areas poorly connected.
The best connected cities are Edinburgh, Bristol, Bournemouth and Hull, where the number of homes with less than 2Mbps was just five percent.
The government recently claimed it was on track to meet its target of having the best broadband in Europe by 2015, and has pledged £530 million for the Broadband Development UK (BDUK) scheme, which seeks to fund the deployment of superfast broadband into rural regions of the nation.
This funding is designed to pay for the deployment of superfast broadband in areas that would not otherwise be covered by BT’s own £2.5bn Infinity fibre deployment, which is going to cover 66 percent of the UK.
BT has so far won all the deals under the initiative so far, prompting a European Union investigation, but BDUK was given Brussels’ blessing earlier this month.
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Very old woodburning stove calling the rather newer kettle black, that is. This should have been sorted out a long time ago if regulation requiring minimum speeds had been bought in last decade. But that required previous government to have been rather more in touch with tech than it was.
Everything revolved around cost (and still does), and no law can ever force an I.P. to provide a service at a loss. It's like passing a law that says everybody must own rolls Royce cars.