Written answers

Tuesday, 22 October 2019

Department of Communications, Climate Action and Environment

National Broadband Plan Administration

Photo of Dara CallearyDara Calleary (Mayo, Fianna Fail)
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493. To ask the Minister for Communications, Climate Action and Environment the date by which the contract for the State intervention area will be awarded under the national broadband plan; and the approximate project build time from award of tender to construction and completion of all premises. [42992/19]

Photo of Richard BrutonRichard Bruton (Dublin Bay North, Fine Gael)
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Every home, farm, school and business in Ireland will have access to high speed broadband – no matter where they are located – following the Government’s decision to approve the appointment of a preferred bidder to the National Broadband Plan. Since the Government decision in May 2019 to appoint NBI as the Preferred Bidder for the National Broadband Plan contract, work has continued on the due diligence necessary to conclude the contract. This process is progressing towards contract award, which is expected before the end of the year. The network deployment will commence shortly after that.

The Bidder has indicated that the network rollout will take an estimated 7 years from the beginning of deployment. A deployment plan will be made available by the Bidder once the contract is signed.

In the first year of roll out, the Bidder will deploy approximately 300 Broadband Connection Points (BCPs) across all counties. It is anticipated that between 7 and 23 BCPs will be deployed in each county. BCPs will provide a community based high speed broadband service, enhancing online participation and allowing for the establishment of digital work hubs in these locations.

The Bidder is aiming to pass 133,000 premises by the end of the second year, with 70-100,000 passed each year thereafter until roll out is completed.

In parallel to the work of finalising the contract, I am considering the recommendations of the Joint Oireachtas Communications Committee report, which was published recently. I will bring my deliberations of the report to Government in due course.

My Department has also recently undertaken a mapping consultation to ensure that the State Intervention Area is up to date and reflects operators’ plans and the responses from householders and businesses with the outcome of this consultation informing the State Aid notification to the European Commission in relation to the NBP.

Photo of Dara CallearyDara Calleary (Mayo, Fianna Fail)
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494. To ask the Minister for Communications, Climate Action and Environment the number of AMBER premises for the State intervention area under the national broadband plan; the number of BLUE premises to be covered by commercial operators; the number of LIGHT BLUE premises to be covered by county; the number of premises that have been connected under the plan for each such category by county in tabular form; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [42993/19]

Photo of Richard BrutonRichard Bruton (Dublin Bay North, Fine Gael)
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Every home, farm, school and business in Ireland will have access to high speed broadband – no matter where they are located – following the Government’s decision to approve the appointment of a preferred bidder to the National Broadband Plan. Under this plan, Ireland will become one of the first countries in the world to ensure that those in rural areas have the same digital opportunities as those in urban areas.In April 2017 my Department published an updated High Speed Broadband Map, which is available at www.broadband.gov.ie. This map shows the areas targeted by commercial operators to provide high speed broadband services and the areas that will be included in the State Intervention Area under the National Broadband Plan. The Map is colour coded and searchable by address or Eircode.

The following table details the percentage of premises to be covered by the State Intervention and through commercial investment by county.

Townland Premises within the NBP Intervention Area Premises within Commercial Operators Area Premises within eir's 300k FTTH rural deployment Total
Carlow 7,892 20,045 167 28,104
Cavan 17,061 24,814 309 42,184
Clare 23,409 44,108 1,280 68,797
Cork 75,173 192,291 3,741 271,205
Donegal 34,180 66,800 1,085 102,065
Dublin 11,482 597,700 278 609,460
Galway 39,337 93,892 2,504 135,733
Kerry 28,795 58,969 1,921 89,685
Kildare 14,192 78,717 517 93,426
Kilkenny 18,068 29,791 296 48,155
Laois 12,799 26,061 499 39,359
Leitrim 11,287 10,527 525 22,339
Limerick 21,970 74,160 1,757 97,887
Longford 8,216 13,931 221 22,368
Louth 8,789 52,385 382 61,556
Mayo 36,934 42,115 4,694 83,743
Meath 20,713 65,098 1,183 86,994
Monaghan 15,776 17,198 210 33,184
Offaly 12,444 24,260 347 37,051
Roscommon 18,517 19,898 794 39,209
Sligo 14,356 25,327 456 40,139
Tipperary 30,306 50,816 2,909 84,031
Waterford 16,676 45,006 308 61,990
Westmeath 12,031 32,255 270 44,556
Wexford 21,908 60,294 707 82,909
Wicklow 14,671 50,181 578 65,430

The Commission for Communications Regulation (ComReg) publishes a quarterly report which highlight trends in the telecommunications industry. This includes the number of subscriptions in Ireland to high speed broadband services by speed (e.g. download speeds of 30 megabits per second) and by platform (fibre, cable, VDSL etc.). The latest report can be found at www.comreg.ie/publication/quarterly-key-data-report-q2-2019.

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