Cambridgeshire County Council has welcomed the news that lightning-fast gigabit connectivity is on the way for Fenland market towns and harder to reach rural areas across Cambridgeshire.
Cambridgeshire will be among the first areas in the country to benefit from the announcement on the 19th of March of the Government’s £5bn Project Gigabit scheme. The scheme will bring gigabit-capable connections (1000 megabits per second) by rolling out full-fibre to over 140,000 premises, starting in early 2022.
Homes and businesses in the Fenland market towns of March and Whittlesey can also look forward to faster broadband connections under Full Fibre rollout plans recently announced by commercial provider CityFibre, as part of a £4 billion build programme expected to reach 8 million premises nationwide by 2025.
The additional public and private sector investments support the county’s Connecting Cambridgeshire digital connectivity programme’s ambitions. They are working with the Government, local authorities and telecoms networks to ensure the region has the best broadband connectivity possible.
Welcoming the announcements, Leader of Cambridgeshire County Council Cllr Steve Count said:
“This is very good news for Cambridgeshire homes and businesses in harder to reach rural areas with poor broadband speeds and will bring significant economic benefits for our Fenland market towns, putting them on a level playing field with the rest of the country.
Our Connecting Cambridgeshire superfast programme has already ensured that most of the county can access superfast broadband. Now, by working with Government and infrastructure providers, we can maximise the use of public subsidy to help provide ever faster, better connectivity in remaining rural areas, which would otherwise be left out because they are not commercially viable.”