Superfast South Yorkshire? You'd get better broadband in Poland

SOUTH YORKSHIRE has slower broadband speeds than some rural villages in Poland and Romania, a campaign group has claimed.
Sheffield broadband speeds are among the slowest, say campaignersSheffield broadband speeds are among the slowest, say campaigners
Sheffield broadband speeds are among the slowest, say campaigners

The Fix Britain’s Internet campaign, which is calling on regulator Ofcom to make changes to the national network Openreach, compared download speeds in villages, towns and cities across Europe and found that Sheffield was among the slowest.

The city’s average download speed of 18.36 mbps puts it in the bottom five cities in the country. It is less than half of that in Fors in Sweden, which has a population of just 860 and has recorded speeds of 40.6 mbps.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

It is more than 11 times slower than the provincial Flanders town of Oudenaarde in Belgium, which has download speeds of almost 202 mbps.

Even the 6,900 residents of the isolated village of Rani in India are faring better with speeds of 34.8mbps, the campaign group said.

The campaign said that since 2008, BT’s investment in Openreach has been ‘broadly flat’, leaving many without fast reliable broadband.

Deployment of high speed broadband has also lagged behind other countries to the extent that only two per cent of the UK has access to ultrafast pure fibre broadband, far behind the likes of Lithuania, where more than a third have access, and Kazakhstan, where 13 per cent do.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Broadband speeds were the subject of debate at a meeting of Sheffield Chamber of Commerce. In its latest quarterly economic survey, just 51 per cent of businesses said they were satisfied with their broadband service for speed, connectivity, cost and reliability.

Super Fast South Yorkshire, the £28 million project to roll out fibre broadband across the Sheffield, Barnsley, Doncaster and Rotherham local authority areas, plans to have fibre access to 98 per cent of the county’s homes and businesses by 2018-19.

The scheme has already rolled-out to parts of Sheffield, including 20,000 homes in Attercliffe, after a deal was signed with BT in September 2014.

Programme manager Natalie Ward said: “This project has a huge scale, and we’re looking at what we can do to reach the remaining two per cent.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“This research does not tell the whole picture. Sheffield and South Yorkshire is in a transition period, but we are putting in the infrastructure and once we have done the job the landscape will be very different.”

But Doncaster-based internet service provider Origin Broadband, a member of Sheffield Chamber of Commerce, said communication with businesses was problematic, with many unaware of when super fast broadband would be installed.