EE has launched 4G in the Northern Fells area of Cumbria, covering 2,000 homes and businesses with superfast broadband for the first time, and has called on the government to do more to encourage the rollout of 4G, including reducing the proposed increases to the cost of 3G licenses.
The operator has been holding a trial in the area surrounding Threlkeld since May 2012, and has since expanded the network to cover 100 square miles, reaching as far north as Wigton. EE plans to extend the network to cover the rest of Cumbria by March 2014, with the town of Carlisle in the north of the county already covered by LTE.
A special promotional price of £25 for 20GB will be offered from 6 December, along with a range of top ups costing between £7.50 and £15 available, with a router costing £69.99 required to access the network.
The Northern Fells Broadband Group estimated that delivering fibre to the area would cost around £10 million, compared to the £1 million it has cost to deploy LTE. BT has won the government money available from the Broadband Delivery UK (BDUK) initiative for Cumbria, but this is restricted to fibre deployment.
CEO Olaf Swantee says the launch of 4G in the region demonstrates how mobile broadband technologies can be used to deliver superfast broadband in areas where fixed connections are not economically viable.
“Our goal is to enhance the digital lives of everyone in the UK, and this major expansion of our superfast broadband service in one of the most rural and geographically challenging areas of the country is a big step towards that goal,” he says. “There is a lot of work to do in 2014 to reach more people and businesses in rural areas, and investment-friendly government policies have an important role to play in supporting this, but today we have proven that 4G has the capability to connect this country’s unconnected, and EE intends to continue to be at the forefront of that.”
Swantee claims the £82 million increase is the same amount it would cost to deliver superfast broadband to an area the size of Wales and also wants the government to increase support for the deployment of wireless technology in rural areas rather than retain its focus on fibre.
However the government has already earmarked £250 million in funding to bring superfast broadband to areas of the country not covered by BDUK, and has reportedly invited mobile operators to participate in the next phase of the plan to extend superfast broadband to 98 percent of the UK by 2018.
EE also plans to bring 4G to Bodmin Moor in Cornwall, an area which has never received superfast broadband, and has also announced it will roll out LTE-Advanced in London next year, as it seeks to improve coverage in urban areas too.
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So once again EE use Cumbria as a PR stunt. They" invest" £1m to launch a service that is roughly 1 year late ... in order to save £82.2m. That's a bargin. Would they have even launched at all if OFCOM had announced a price increase?
Cumbria. I don't think those people saving £9million & Getting 4G will be calling this a PR stunt & a lot more than £1million has been invested in this. The £1 million is the cost to the beneficiaries not EE. There is nothing in the article to say the government will subsidise the £82 million for the licence. O2 & Vodaphone knew that 4G was coming and failed to act in the way the Orange & T-mobile did to join forces to set up 4G on the 1800 spectrum 1 year before the auction. The upgrade of 2g & 3g as well as 4G rollout is costing 1.5 million a day over the next year or 2 & will benefit the whole country.