British PM Boris Johnson poised to unveil as much as US$6 billion in broadband fund

In a photo taken on Spet 29, Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson attends the Conservative Party Conference in Manchester, Britain. PHOTO: EPA-EFE

LONDON(BLOOMBERG) - UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson is set to announce as much as 5 billion pounds (S$8.5 billion) in government funding for faster telecom networks, according to a person familiar with the matter.

The spending could be revealed at the ruling Conservative Party's conference in Manchester this week, and would subsidise infrastructure including fibre optic connections to improve broadband in remote parts of Britain, said an official who declined to be identified as the plans are still confidential.

The money would be put towards delivering a key pledge from Johnson's recent campaign to lead the Conservative Party, many of whose voters live in rural areas. He promised to accelerate his predecessor's ambition to hook up every property in the country to fibre optic broadband, aiming for 2025, eight years earlier than the previous goal.

The Sunday Telegraph newspaper first reported the latest funding. Earlier this month Culture Secretary Nicky Morgan convened broadband executives to work out details, with bosses attending from former state monopoly BT Group Plc, Liberty Global Plc's Virgin Media, and alternative networks such as Goldman Sachs Group Inc.-owned CityFibre Ltd.

Gaps in the plans include how to avoid a wasteful building war, in which companies chase densely-populated, profitable areas and leave sparser regions behind. About a 10th of Britain's homes and businesses could need state support because connecting them is not commercially viable, according to a government review published last year.

The government's stated goal of fibre optic connections for the whole country has been moderated and officials now talk about "gigabit-capable" connections, a shift that allows for technologies like wireless 5G and Virgin Media's coaxial cable. The UK lags European neighbours in full fibre, which reaches only 8 per cent of British premises compared to about 90 per cent of homes in Portugal and 70 per cent in Spain.

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