Blueprint
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
FORM 6-K
Report of Foreign Private Issuer
Pursuant to Rule 13a-16 or 15d-16 of
the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
Date of
Announcement: 31 October
2017
BT Group plc
(Translation
of registrant's name into English)
BT
Group plc
81 Newgate
Street
London
EC1A 7AJ
England
(Address
of principal executive offices)
Indicate
by check mark whether the registrant files or will file annual
reports under cover Form 20-F or Form 40-F.
Form
20-F..X...
Form 40-F
Indicate
by check mark whether the registrant by furnishing the information
contained in this Form is also thereby furnishing the information
to the Commission pursuant to Rule 12g3-2(b) under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934.
Yes
No ..X..
Tuesday, October 31, 2017
Industry
welcomes Openreach ambition to build
a large FTTP broadband network
●
First major
confidential consultation led by a more independent
Openreach
●
Communications
Providers (CPs) agree - Fibre-to-the-Premises (FTTP) technology
would future-proof Britain's digital
infrastructure
●
Several
enablers needed to make the plan viable, including 'FTTP
switchover' and a supportive policy and regulatory
environment
●
Deciding how to
recover costs fairly will be critical
●
Some CPs are
interested in co-investment and risk sharing
models
The
UK's Communications Providers have welcomed the ambition of
Openreach,
Britain's digital network business, to build a large-scale
Fibre-to-the-Premises (FTTP) network across the country. There is
also broad agreement that FTTP would safeguard the UK's position as
a leading digital economy - but to make the investment viable, a
number of key enablers will need to be put in place through close
co-operation among the communications industry, Ofcom and
Government.
Openreach,
which builds and maintains the millions of miles of wires and
cables that connect Britain's homes, businesses and devices to the
internet, has been consulting its wholesale customers -
Communications Providers such as Sky,
TalkTalk,
BT
and Vodafone,
and hundreds of others represented by the Federation
of Communications Services. It wants to see if there's
enough demand for a large FTTP network that could deliver Gigabit
speeds and more reliable broadband services for decades to
come.
The
consultation, which was open to all CPs and ran from mid-July to
the end of September, found that there is broad support for
Openreach to build a large-scale FTTP network which would bring
substantial benefits for all, including better, more predictable
services and faster, more consistent broadband speeds. It also
highlighted significant benefits for the British economy and
society, such as productivity growth, opportunities for smart
cities, and greater application of e-health and e-learning
services.
In the
near term, most CPs expect Britain's existing broadband
technologies to provide enough speed for the majority of consumers
but, whilst there is no consensus on when Gigabit speeds will be
needed, they agree that ultimately a large scale FTTP network will
be a necessity. Given the timescales involved in building that
network, there is strong support for Openreach to start the
engineering work required sooner rather than later.
However,
there are still challenges to overcome if the industry is going to
build a viable FTTP business case, and Openreach has highlighted a
number of key enablers that need to be put in place through close
co-operation between Openreach, CPs, Ofcom and Government. These
enablers include:
●
A supportive policy and regulatory environment that encourages
investment
●
'FTTP switchover' - to maximise the benefits for all parties,
Openreach proposes that all customers should be migrated over to
the new network as quickly as possible after it has been built in a
given area
●
Agreeing how investment costs can be fairly recovered
●
Openreach proving that it can build FTTP at scale for a competitive
cost
Openreach
is working to demonstrate that its engineers can build FTTP
connections at scale in urban and suburban areas for a competitive
price. It has been trialing new deployment techniques across the
country and drawing on the latest techniques and tools from around
the world to bring the costs down. This activity has already
resulted in a halving of the cost of its FTTP delivery over the
last year.
Like
other network investors, Openreach is also seeking a more
supportive policy and regulatory environment to build more FTTP in
the UK, including a constructive resolution to the application of
business rates and to Ofcom's Wholesale Local Access (WLA) market
review. The economic case will also rely on local and central
government support to reduce red tape, for example by simplifying
wayleavesi
and traffic management processes.
Openreach
will need to recover the costs of a very large investment in a new,
faster and more reliable network in the wholesale prices it charges
to CPs. A large scale FTTP network is likely to benefit a broad set
of customers over time, so Openreach believes the costs should be
spread fairly across a broad customer base to reflect that. This
would help to keep down any wholesale price increases required to
support the investment case, whilst CPs and Openreach would benefit
from cost savings through the increased reliability of the
network.
CPs
acknowledge that charging a large premium for ultrafast services
alone is unlikely to succeed, but question how much more customers
will be willing to pay for the same headline speeds on a better
platform. Openreach estimates that building FTTP connections all
the way to ten million front doors would cost in the region of
£3bn to £6bn, so deciding how that investment can be
recovered fairly through wholesale pricing will be critical to
making a commercial case work.
The
consultation also uncovered broad support for a 'switchover'
approach to FTTP which would migrate all customers onto the new
platform - and retire the old one - as quickly as possible after it
has been built in a given area. But it's clear that the operational
complexity and cost of such a programme would be
significant.
Both
Openreach and its wholesale customers agree that protecting service
continuity during a switchover - especially for vulnerable
consumers - and communicating the process effectively would be
critical elements of any programme. Having acknowledged that, there
was agreement that migrating customers in this phased approach
would maximise the benefits for all parties and help to strengthen
the economic case for investment.
Some
CPs are also interested in sharing the risk of the investment, but
in return for preferential terms on the infrastructure that's
built, with a variety of different models suggested. There were
also a range of views expressed on how Openreach should decide on
the scale, make-up and locations of the new network, and these will
be considered in detail as the business develops its new network
strategy.
Clive
Selley, CEO, Openreach, said: "We believe that under the right
conditions, we could build FTTP connections to ten million homes
and businesses by the mid-2020s. We want to do it, we think it's
the right thing to do for the UK, but it's clear that we can't do
it alone, so I'm encouraged to hear that our wholesale customers
support our vision.
"Having
said that, we're under no illusions about the challenges that lie
ahead because we need to build a business case that's workable and
fair for everyone. That means we need a regulatory environment that
encourages investment, and we need to agree how the costs of such a
huge engineering project can be recovered fairly from all those
that stand to benefit.
"Of
course that's going to be tough, but we need to get into the detail
of that now with our customers, with Ofcom and with Government. I
believe Openreach has a critical role to play in achieving such an
ambitious goal, and the prize for our CP customers, their customers
and the UK as a whole could be huge."
Openreach
is now considering all of the responses and options carefully as it
develops its new network strategy. The business will then invite
views from CPs on a more specific set of proposals that cover
potential pricing, footprint, and a plan for automatic switchover,
by the end of 2017. It continues to welcome discussions with CPs on
co-investment, risk sharing and network architecture approaches,
and will continue engaging with Ofcom and Government to build an
environment that encourages and facilitates
investment.
ENDS
iThe consent in writing that
allows Openreach to carry out work on privately-owned
land.
Notes to editors
For further information
Enquiries about this story can be made to the Openreach PR team on
0207 809 7950 or at press@openreach.co.uk.
All news releases can be accessed on our
web site.
About Openreach
Openreach
is Britain's digital network business.
We're
30,400 people who connect homes, mobile phone masts, schools,
shops, banks, hospitals, libraries, broadcasters, governments and
businesses - large and small - to the world.
Our
mission is to build the best possible network, with the highest
quality service, making sure that everyone in Britain can be
connected.
We work
on behalf of more than 580 communications providers like SKY,
TalkTalk, Vodafone, and BT, and our fibre broadband network is the
biggest in the UK, passing more than 26.5 million premises. We're
also the platform for Britain's thriving digital economy, which is
the largest in the G20.
We're
working hard to give people the speeds they need to run and enjoy
their daily lives. Over the last decade, we've invested more than
£11 billion into our network and we now manage more than 158
million kilometres of cable stretching from Scotland to Cornwall,
from Wales to the east coast. And we're continuing to take that
network further - making superfast broadband speeds available to
thousands more homes and businesses every week.
Openreach
is a wholly owned and independently governed division of the BT
Group, and it is a highly regulated business, with more than 90 per
cent of our revenues generated from services that are regulated by
Ofcom.
Any
company can access our products under exactly the same prices,
terms and conditions.
For the
year ended 31 March 2017, we reported revenues of
£5.1bn.
For more information,
visit openreach.co.uk
Signatures
Pursuant
to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the
registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf
by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
BT Group plc
(Registrant)
By:
/s/ Dan Fitz, Company Secretary
--------------------
Dan
Fitz, Company Secretary.
Date
31 October 2017