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News : Irish Last Updated: Jan 24, 2010 - 3:47:13 PM


In Ireland 0.6% of broadband connections are fibre optic; By 2015 every Finnish household must be within 2km of fibre optic cable running at 100 megabits per second
By Finfacts Team
Jan 24, 2010 - 3:38:28 PM

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In Ireland 0.6 percent of total broadband connections are fibre connections. This compares to 11.3 percent of subscribers on average in OECD-28 countries. In 2009, Finland's government announced that access to a broadband internet connection was a human right, and that everyone in the country must have a connection with a minimum speed of one megabit by this summer. Now the country's going even further - - by 2015 every household must be within 2km of a fibre optic cable supplying superfast broadband running at 100 megabits per second.

A  Forfás report published on Friday, said Ireland has made significant progress in improving levels of broadband coverage and take-up in the last two years, however we are still behind competitor countries in terms of rolling out high speed next generation networks (NGN).

Broadband connections now account for 90 percent of internet connections, compared to 58 percent in Q1 2007, which represents a significant transition from dial-up. Ireland has 21.4 broadband subscribers per 100 inhabitants compared to the OECD average of 22.4 (excluding mobile broadband and leading countries such as the Netherlands (38.1) and Denmark (37).

The download speeds available in Ireland are greatly improved on recent years, but remain below the fastest speeds available to customers in other OECD countries. In Ireland 0.6 percent of total broadband connections are fibre connections. This compares to 11.3 percent of subscribers on average in OECD-28 countries.

Commenting, Jane Williams, Chief Executive, Forfás, said “Advanced broadband services are essential to underpinning entrepreneurship and innovation and are needed to position Ireland for export led recovery. Greater investment in telecommunications infrastructure is required if Ireland is to converge towards leading countries in terms of high quality broadband availability. Ireland needs to be among the leaders in Europe in the provision of next generation telecommunications infrastructure, access and services by 2012. Many telecommunications companies and states around the world are investing significantly in next generation networks that can cater for the bandwidth needs of industries in the future. Driving next generation connectivity is a key enterprise policy priority for Ireland. We must ensure that a competitiveness threat does not open up for Irish firms as significantly faster speeds are becoming widespread in other countries.”

Ireland’s key weakness is the lack of deployment of fibre infrastructure closer to the consumer for both wired and wireless networks. The report makes a number of key policy recommendations to address this including:

  • Actions to facilitate the necessary investment by private telecommunications operators. Arising from changes in EU policy, the Department of Communications and ComReg should review options to increase revenues and reduce costs and risks for private sector operators while continuing to support competition in the market. This includes ensuring an appropriate return on investment for private telecoms operators to incentivise investment in next generation networks; examining the potential for infrastructure sharing between telecommunication operators; reducing the costs of building access networks, and enabling wireless spectrum to play a strong role in the delivery of higher-speed broadband.

Actions to utilise existing state investment and regulation to support development.

This includes:

  • Facilitating access to public ducting and other infrastructure that could be used for fibre deployment. The Department of Communications has committed to a “one-stop shop” for State broadband infrastructure to provide broadband operators with integrated access to
    State-owned infrastructure.
  • Extending existing Metropolitan Area Networks to key IDA industrial sites in Cork and Waterford to meet existing enterprise needs; and
  • Building additional MANs in five outstanding National Spatial Strategy centres can support the availability of advanced broadband services.

Last week, a report from US company Akami, showed that Ireland 73 percent improvement in connection speed in a year.

Ireland's Broadband Performance and Policy Actions (pdf)

By July 2010, every Finn will have access to a 1 Megabit-per-second broadband connection. Finland just became the first country in the world to sign a law that provides every citizen of the country with a legal right to a broadband connection.

The Finnish government had already announced that every citizen should have access to a 100 Megabit-per-second broadband connection by the end of 2015. Now, it took an intermediary step toward that goal. In mid-October, the Ministry of Transport and Communications announced that every Finn should have a legal right to a 1 Megabit-per-second connection by next summer.

BCC video on broadband in Finland

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