Connecting Devon and Somerset
Superfast Extension Programme 04th December 2015
‘The biggest Digital Infrastructure build opportunity for rural communities in England’
Today’s Agenda11.00 Welcome Address11.05 Local Political Perspective11.20 BDUK Commitment to the Programme11.35 Update on State Aid11.50 Coffee12.20 Current Thinking to move CDS Forward & Supplier’s Perspective13.10 Panel Q&A & Closing Remarks13.30 Networking & Lunch followed by
Supplier Sessions with CDS Team
Paula HewittCDS Board Member
‘The biggest Digital Infrastructure build opportunity for rural communities in England’
Where we are now
• 225,000 premises fibre connected• Has averaged delivery of 7,000 premises a
month• On track to extend Superfast broadband to
around 90% of premises (270,000 in CDS programme)
Where we want to be • Phase 2 is all about SuperFast• To go to 95% and beyond• By the end of 2017• 4th utility• A robust and comprehensive solution to
benefit our communities
Challenges for the next Phase
• Widespread Intervention area • Areas of infill• Complex topography• Expectations• Your input
Introducing the CDS Team• Keri Denton – Programme Director• Phil Roberts – Programme Manager• Matt Ballard – Programme Manager
• Ken Singleton- Technical advisor• Martin Gerrish - Finance
• Sofie Francis – Communications• Iain Perkins - Procurement and Contracts
• Karen Bohan - Officer • Nathaniel Lucas – Officer
• Matt Barrow – Officer• Louise Jarman– Officer
• Katriona Lovelock Officer• Rem Noormohamed – Legal advisor
Councillor Andrew Leadbetter CDS Board Member
‘The biggest Digital Infrastructure build opportunity for rural communities in England’
Positive impact of broadband• “Superfast broadband is rapidly becoming an
absolute necessity”• “ a massive plus”• “I’m delighted with it – it’s given me an extra
hour every day”• “We export to over 50 countries …I’m installing
the systems I’ve wanted to deploy for ages”• “we can now work remotely”
Importance to business in rural areas• 94% of SME’s think reliable internet connection
critical to their business• 67% agree reliance on internet will increase• 14% lack of reliable SFBB the main barrier to growth
(FSB research)
• Daily contact from businesses asking when they will be connected.
• Experience of strong take up in rural areas.• 20 Additional Business Parks covered
Councillor David HallCDS Board Member
‘The biggest Digital Infrastructure build opportunity for rural communities in England’
Important region• CDS Phase 2 an important opportunity• Significant economy• Large population• Good take up
All about Growth• GVA below national average• Local understanding of need for and
commitment to growth• Centres of excellence; aerospace, marine,
nuclear, big data, agri-tech etc.• Need for cost effective technologies
Financial and political commitment
• Testing economic times• Significant support from authorities across the
region• Joint approach with private sector
What we hope to achieve today…. Provide information about the current position• Obtain a clear understanding of
– any concerns of potential bidders– What we can do to make bidding attractive for you– Factors which may influence desire to engage in
bidding.– Opportunity for networking within sector to enable
collaborative working and innovative solutions
Chris Townsend CEO, BDUK.
‘The biggest Digital Infrastructure build opportunity for rural communities in England’
Department for Culture, Media & Sport
1. Superfast broadband coverage to 90% of UK by early 2016
2. Universal 2Mbps standard broadband access by end of 2015
3. Superfast broadband to 95% of UK by 2017
4. Developing options to extend superfast broadband coverage beyond 95%
5. Provided over 50,000 connection vouchers to SMEs
Delivering superfast broadband to the UK
Department for Culture, Media & SportFinal 0.5-1.0% likely to require high-speed satellite
BT superfast coverage only(incl. commercial & non-BDUK)
Proportion of UK premises able to receive superfast speeds
BT and Virgin premises
Virginonly
BDUK Phase 1£1.2bn public funds
95%90.8%75%
4.2m
BDUK Phase
2Up to
£500m
9%
21.6m12.9m
45%
100%
1.1m
25.8m 26.9m
28m
2.7m
Number of premises
99%
20172015
Extending coverage
Department for Culture, Media & Sport
Current position
• Superfast broadband is available to 83 per cent of UK premises
– up from 45 per cent in 2010 •(Ofcom’s Strategic Review of Digital Communications discussion document, July 2015)
• Average broadband speed in the UK has more than quadrupled since 2010 – from 5.2Mbps in May 2010 to 28Mbps in June 2015
(Ofcom Infrastructure Report, 2014)
• 99 per cent of premises are able to access speeds of 2Mbps or above by end of 2015 and USC will offer option for the remaining 1%
(Ofcom European Broadband Scorecard, February 2015)
• Superfast broadband coverage (over 83%) and take-up per household (over 27%) in the UK is highest among EU5 countries
Department for Culture, Media & Sport
Phase 1 & 2 - 95% of the UK
£1.2bn total public investment with £530 million from BDUK to reach 90% of UK premises by 2016
44 projects across the UK
3.3 million premises passed
4 million by spring 2016
4.2 million additional premises by June 2016
£250m BDUK funding plus local match funding to reach 95% of UK by end of 2017
44 contracts signed
3 Contracts to be signed
1 million additional premises by December 2017
Phase 1 superfast roll-out Phase 2 superfast roll-out
Department for Culture, Media & Sport
Broadband Fund for the South West
• The new Digital Communications Infrastructure Strategy outlines an ambition for Ultrafast Broadband for nearly all of the UK
• This fund extends the support already being provided through the superfast programme
• The south west has some of the most difficult topography in the UK for fixed broadband rollout
• The fund will prioritise bids which provide ultrafast speeds of at least 100Mbps.
• £5m available in each of 16/17 and 17/18
Department for Culture, Media & Sport
£8m market test pilots exploring options for going beyond 95%
7 pilots being taken forward into deployment Suppliers have now published their feasibility reports live services available
over 700 customers connected
Phase 3 - the final 5%Phase 3 superfast roll-out
Department for Culture, Media & Sport
• Demonstrated the viability of alternative approaches in the Final 5%
• Flexibility has created cost savings in deployment.
• Working successfully with local authorities
• Exploring the options for community funding models
• Ways of overcoming difficulties in relation to planning permission
Market Test Pilots:Initial Findings
Department for Culture, Media & Sport
Market Test Pilots
Supplier Location Technology
Satellite Internet Exmoor, Devon & Somerset
Superfast capable satellite
Callflow Hampshire Hybrid FTTP, FTTC and FWA
Avanti Scotland & Northern Ireland
Superfast capable satellite
AB Internet Monmouthshire Hybrid fibre and wireless
Airwave North Yorkshire Fixed Wireless
Quickline North & North East Lincolnshire
Fixed Wireless
Cybermor Northumberland Hybrid fibre and wireless
Department for Culture, Media & Sport
Market Test Pilots: Wireless
AB Internet - Fixed Wireless
Superfast
Airwave – Next Generation Wireless
Quickline - Superfast Wireless Network.
Department for Culture, Media & Sport
Market Test Pilots: Hybrid
Cybermoor – FTTP in a Challenging Environment.
Call Flow – Hybrid Approach
Department for Culture, Media & Sport
Market Test Pilots: Satellite
Satellite Internet - Superfast Capable
Satellite
Avanti - Superfast Capable Satellite
Department for Culture, Media & Sport
Market Test Pilots:What are customers saying?
• 92% of respondents thought there were benefits to the new broadband.
• The three most popular benefits of new broadband identified by respondents
were speed, reliability and cost.
• Only 2% of respondents do not intend to keep their new broadband at the end of the pilot period, if the price remains the same.
BDUK Survey – September 2015
Department for Culture, Media & Sport
Growth in non-BT projects
June 2013Rural Community Broadband Fund (~£1m) Fibre Garden (ITS) Tove Valley Northmoor (Gigaclear)
June 20147 x Market Test Pilots (£8m) AB Internet Airwave Avanti CallFlow Cybermoor Quickline Satellite Internet
2015Phase 2 Procurements (£20m) Airband Callflow Cotswold (ITS) Gigaclear x3 UK Broadband
Department for Culture, Media & Sport
BDUK Commitment
• BDUK Funding has been ring fenced for delivery of the project
• BDUK are committed to supporting CDS with senior management support, project management and value for money advice
• BDUK are committed to finding a State Aid solution that will work for the CDS Phase 2 Procurement
Matt AgarCommercial Lead BDUK
‘The biggest Digital Infrastructure build opportunity for rural communities in England’
Page 32
• Rules designed to regulate the use of public sector resources so as to avoid distortions of competition in EU
– Can include Subsidies, Grants, Loans, Guarantees, Benefits in Kind
• The specific State aid rules for the deployment of broadband networks are referred to as the Broadband Guidelines.
State aid rules do not generally apply to:• Aid which satisfies the Market Economy Operator principle (formerly “MEIP”)
– The public body must be behaving in the same way as a private investor in similar circumstances.
– E.g. pari passu loans and equity, appropriately priced guarantees
• Aid to compensate for Services of General Economic Interest (SGEI)– Relates to beneficiaries entrusted with clearly defined public service
mission
What is State aid?
Page 33
• BDUK approach to State aid is to progress a twin-track process to a flexible approach for local bodies to either:- – Pursue an ‘umbrella’ Notification: A process where the Commission examines how the
scheme conforms to the 2013 Broadband Guidelines and whether any derogations are necessary; and – as an alternative
– Support General Block Exemption Regulation II (GBER II) Article 52: For smaller schemes and projects (schemes less than €150 million or projects less than €70 million).
• GBER compliant projects do not require notification, but are subject to strict criteria regarding the deployment of broadband, in particular, requiring the provision of full open access.
• BDUK is aligning the two approaches as much as possible, incorporating recent best practice, as well as reflecting on our conversations with the Commission, to make both options as practicable as possible• E.g. balancing Commission’s expectation for smaller procuring smaller areas with
the market’s requirement for a minimum scale of network and expectation of low ‘transaction costs’
BDUK Approach to State aid
Page 34
• The full requirements of the Broadband Guidelines flow through to any procurements seeking to utilise GBER II as their State aid ‘approval’ route.
• The key requirements for procurements under GBER II is that they will need to provide full open access and where targeted to provide NGA services:-– Fibre to the Premise – duct access, dark fibre, physical unbundling and bitstream.– Fibre to the Cabinet – duct access, dark fibre, sub-loop unbundling and bitstream– Fixed Wireless Access – mast, antennae, backhaul and bitstream
• Key principle is that access is not limited to broadband uses and that other forms of access e.g. mobile has to be provided subject to reasonableness test.
Use of GBER II
Page 35
• The Guidelines and GBER II leave some uncertainty upon the requirements for open access and how in the practical terms this can be delivered by operators.
• We have engaged with market to practically define access and will be presenting the outcome of this to the Commission very soon.
• BDUK will have completed engagement and defined open access will be available prior to when bidders need to begin to prepare formal bids
Use of GBER II
Page 36
State Aid – Role of the National Competence Centre• BDUK’s NCC will provide oversight upon any newly notified scheme or
GBER II
• OMR – Request for Information to broadband operators
• Support local Bodies in analysis and assessment responses (coverage and technology)
• Considers assessment of alternative delivery model
• NCC validates, supplier evaluation and state aid mapping
Open Market Review
Public Consultation
• Ensures transparency as to where aid targeted.
• Seeks feedback from stakeholders (residents, businesses, suppliers).
• Confirms legal basis of targeted areas
• Requests infrastructure sharing
• NCC confirms Local Body intervention area
• Open, transparent, non discriminatory tender.
• Technology neutral.• NGA qualifying and
target appropriate white areas
• Makes use of existing assets/infrastructure.
• Step change - significant new investment in new infrastructure and doubling speeds.
• NCC confirms compliant process and provides confirms state aid compatibility
Sourcing In Life
• Wholesale access available and wholesale access requests.
• Transparency of the deployed infrastructure.
• Clawback implemented
• Price benchmarking.
• NCC monitor on-going compliance
Pre-Procurement Procurement and Contracting
Page 37
State aid – Key Messages for Suppliers
• Co-operate with Local Body when they are developing mapping and respond with information requested.– We don’t want to spend money where it is not required– Similar approach to development of mapping but encourage premise level
mapping– Evidence technical capability of networks as qualifying NGA Technology (e.g.
FTTC/P, cable (DOCSIS 3.0), advanced wireless technologies)
• In submitting bids – Understand your financial models and be able to demonstrate financial viability.– Evidence NGA technology compliance. – Demonstrate how wholesale access requirements will be met.
• NCC is happy to engage in direct dialogue with Suppliers on how to evidence NGA compliance for State aid approval
Page 38
Reference Material
• Broadband Guidelines– http
://eur-lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/LexUriServ.do?uri=OJ:C:2013:025:0001:0026:EN:PDF)
• General Block Exemption Regulation– http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/PDF/?
uri=CELEX:32014R0651&from=EN
• BDUK State aid pages– https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/state-aid-advice
Page 39
THANK YOU• For any questions please contact us:
– Matt Agar [email protected]– The National Competence Centre at [email protected]
Phil Roberts & Ken Singleton
CDS Programme Team
‘The biggest Digital Infrastructure build opportunity for rural communities in England’
Current thinking on moving CDS forward: Topics to be covered:– EME intelligence– Solution layers and costs– Outline coverage requirements– Areas for further exploration– Possible scenarios– Information to assist Bidders
Current Thinking for CDS to move forward: • Biggest Digital Infrastructure build opportunity for rural
communities in England• EME Intelligence has helped CDS to:
– Understand Industry ‘s business development cycles & internal business case drivers to bid for an opportunity of this scale
– Understand the scope, capabilities and commercial direction of Suppliers through Early Market Engagement
– Recognise the solution layers that need to be considered during ITT development
– Capture the solution features that need to be considered in the ITT– Recognise the need to offer the catchment area in ways that allow
industry to deliver an optimum solution
EME Intelligence• Understanding the scope of Companies in EME the stage , we have engaged in the
following Sector:• Fibre Operators & Providers• Wireless Operators & Providers• Main Contractors• Industry OEM’s
• And have covered the following range of topics and USP’:• Wholesale Access Network Operator• Delivery contractor / sub contractor experience• Whole Area Level or Smaller Lots• Private funding & Leverage• Alternative Business Models• Technical solution expertise
Illustration of Solution layers and unit costs
£ 200 £1700£ 600 £1000
Best Practice Network Solution
Technology vs Network Solution vs Unit Cost
--------------VDSL------------------>Best Practice Technology
Fit
--------------Wireless------------>
-----------------Fibre------------>
SUPERFASTAlt Net Sub Loop Unbundling
FTTC
Alt Net Fixed Wireless AccessLicensed Spectrum - LTE
Unlicensed FWASUPERFAST
ULTRAFASTAlt Net Fibre based Rural Ethernet
GPON
*All figures are indicative estimates only and should not be relied upon to make any decisions.
<------------------------------Coverage Requirements------------------------------>
Illustration of Solution layers and costs
£ 200 £1700
Unit Costs vs Funding Leverage
£ 600 £1000
Unit costs per
premise to LB after varying
Leverage examples Low CAPEX Leverage in order of 20%
£ 480 £ 800 £1530£ 160
High CAPEX Leverage in order of 50% and above
£ 100 £ 500 £ 850
*All figures are indicative estimates only and should not be relied upon to make any decisions.
£ 300
Coverage requirements• Very rural; sparsely populated; difficult terrain• No large clusters of unserved premises• Spread across entire Programme Area• Probably the largest number of unserved premises in
the UK• BUT significant pent-up demand from poor speed areas
Connecting Devon and Somerset
National Parks
Postcodes with NGA White Premises
Heat Map showing density of NGA White Premises
25
0.5
Average of NGA White Premises per km2
7 6 5
Example of Possible Zones
19,000
14,000
24,000
19,000
15,000
19,000
NGA White Premises(ref Feb 15 OMR currently in revision)
7
11
12
15
11
25
NGA White Premises per km2
Heat Map overlaid with postcode locations
Heat Map of NGA White Premises
25
0.5
Average of NGA White Premises per km2
7 6 5
Heat Map of NGA White Premises
25
0.5
Average of NGA White Premises per km2
7 6 5
Heat Map of NGA White Premises
25
0.5
Average of NGA White Premises per km2
7 6 5
Heat Map of NGA White Premises
25
0.5
Average of NGA White Premises per km2
7 6 5
Heat Map of NGA White Premises
25
0.5
Average of NGA White Premises per km2
7 6 5
Heat Map of NGA White Premises
25
0.5
Average of NGA White Premises per km2
7 6 5
Predicted Geographical Coverage at the end of Phase 1 Contract
Yellow – one superfast providerBlue - no superfast provision
Phil RobertsCDS Programme Team
‘The biggest Digital Infrastructure build opportunity for rural communities in England’
Scope of the ChallengeOpen Market Review
– New OMR issued 9th November – closing date 7 Dec– Requested premise level information in Intervention
Area– Review will update on
• Current NGA deployment• Anticipated deployment over next 3 year period
– We want to cover what’s left!
Getting a head startInformation currently available
– Local authority Assets: http://www.connectingdevonandsomerset.co.uk/phase-ii-superfast-extension-programme/ ....
– CDS can access Property database of County & District Asset locations for Devon, Somerset, Police, Fire & Rescue, Exeter University
– CDS can help identify potential assets in ‘difficult’ locations– CDS can help identify areas of likely future development– Also on CDS website access to OMR data from Feb 2015 (NB Actual
Intervention Area will have increased (new sites/postcodes, Multiple Occupancy dwellings)
What we have supplied in the past - What was helpful?Locations /assets• Building locations & other enabling infrastructure • Mobile and other phone masts & aerial locations• Wind farms
What we have supplied in the past - What was helpful?Highways• Civil works on roads plans• General restrictions on road access (e.g. no-go
periods due to holiday traffic)• Planned Local Authority street lighting works• Street furniture
What we have supplied in the past - What was helpful?Opportunities/ restrictions• Employment land – current, planned & future areas• Conservation, wildlife and woodland areas owned
by LA’s* NB Backhaul EME suggested some useful alternatives in the SW region
Local Authority/Public Asset Info– What further information would be useful?– How can CDS help to simplify your planning process
with respect to public assets?Areas to think about:– What can suppliers offer in return for ‘free’ or
nominal cost for way leaves?– What are the arrangements with landowners,
farmers etc. for power (if required for deployed solution)?
Areas CDS would like to explore with Suppliers• Business model options?• Customer take-up assumptions?• State Aid requirements; e.g. Open Access &
Wholesale pricing?• Coverage capabilities for different technologies?• Catchment area: one ‘superlot’ and/or sub Lot
areas?• Addition of requirement for ‘Ultrafast’
broadband?
‘The biggest Digital Infrastructure build opportunity for rural
communities in England’
Connecting Devon and SomersetConnecting Devon and Somerset
‘The biggest Digital Infrastructure build opportunity for rural
communities in England’
Connecting Devon and Somerset
• Todays Presentation • Q&A
Can be found at:www.supplyingthesouthwest.org.uk
Questions & Answer Session
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