South coast seaside resort Bournemouth is to be the UK's first large town to
have both residential and business fully connected with an optical fibre
network.
H2O Networks is providing the
fibre, the majority of which will go into Bournemouth's sewer system using H2O's
fibre optical cable underground sewer (FOCUS). H2O networks say the cost was
around £30 million and that the bandwidth provided to over 88,000 homes in
Bournemouth would exceed current ADSL speeds by "typically tens or even hundreds
of Mbit/s."
"Many households and broadband customers in the UK have insufficient
connectivity bandwidths because they are attached to legacy networks deployed in
the 20th Century that just can’t cope with demand," said H2O Networks' CEO Elfed
Thomas. "Our solution brings us right into the 21st Century and beyond, with
speeds in excess of 100Mbit/s.”
Another advantage touted by H2O Networks is that deploying fibre through the
ready-made ducts the sewers provide means, "The expensive and environmentally
unfriendly method of digging up the roads is unnecessary and disruption to the
road infrastructure is kept to a minimum. In addition, the system is at least 80
per cent faster to deploy than traditional methods."
H2O Networks said that where sewers could not be used it would install fibre
using its patented blown mini duct (BMD) system, which would cause minimal
disruption locally as it doesn't require a "civil dig".
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