This item was published during the term of a previous administration that ended in April 2007
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Broadband for all Scotland
01/06/2004
The Executive will step in to ensure every community in
Scotland has access to affordable broadband by the end of
2005, it was announced today.
This means the more remote and rural parts of Scotland
will be able to access the vital technology - even where it
is not feasible to provide broadband commercially.
Enterprise Minister Jim Wallace also announced that
Broadband service has been established in each of
Scotland's three main island communities.
Residents in Kirkwall on Orkney, Lerwick on Shetland and
Stornoway in the Western Isles will now have access to the
technology and the advantages it brings.
It means around a third of households and businesses
on the three island groups will have access to broadband.
Mr Wallace said:
"We said in our Partnership Agreement that we wanted
every community in Scotland to have access to broadband and
we are delivering on this.
"The Executive has made it clear that economic growth is
our top priority. By providing all communities in Scotland
with access to broadband technology and the huge benefits
it brings, we are putting in place an important business
tool to facilitate this growth.
"Broadband will make tangible differences in many areas
of life on the Islands. It will help in business operation
and growth and will aid the delivery and development of
education.
"This exciting progress is the result of Highlands
and Islands Enterprise and the Scottish Executive working
in partnership to achieve landmark co-operation between BT
and Thus. These telecoms companies are sharing
infrastructure and expertise in order to deliver, for the
first time ever, this affordable broadband solution.
During a visit to Codyne Limited in Aberdeenshire, Mr
Wallace said :
"Codyne Limited is a great example of how broadband
can increase business success and open up new markets. This
company has had broadband for just one month but is already
is using it to improve their competitive advantage.
Benefits have included being able to deal more quickly with
customer requests to improving back office activities."
Codyne Limited of Portlethen develops and implements
solutions for the management of environmental quality
issues such as water disinfection and treatment of oil
spills in harbours.
Employing five people, the company used the Executive's
Business Broadband Incentive scheme to help it get
broadband.
The company's Ed Gardyne said : "There is no doubt that
broadband facilitates enterprise. We are now able to check
the uniqueness of our developing products on the internet
and explore more quickly the possibility of global
partnerships.
"We have three or four exclusive UK partnership deals
with US or global companies which grew from initial contact
through the internet," he said.
"The business benefits achieved by Codyne illustrate why
companies across Scotland should get broadband now, to
ensure that they maximise benefits from the technology.
"Broadband is also important to the life of communities
and individuals - it can help in the delivery and
development of education and learning, and provides access
to services. It also enables people to pursue their hobbies
and find new and exciting ways to use their free time.
"The Executive will now put the procurement contract for
the initiative to tender and will notify it to the European
Commission."
The Executive's previous target of 70 per cent coverage
of the population with access to ADSL or equivalent by
March 2004 was achieved in January. In late April BT
announced that all exchanges on the trigger list will be
ADSL enabled by summer 2005. But 400 of the 600 UK
exchanges not on the trigger list are in Scotland, mostly
in the Highlands and Islands. Coverage in Scotland now
stands at 78 per cent and is expected to increase to 95 per
cent by the summer of next year - 80 per cent in the
highlands and islands- as these commercial triggers are
activated.
Other rural broadband initiatives include :
- Exchange upgrades part-funded by Broadband for
Scotland have brought ADSL to the Western and Northern
Isles helping to increase broadband coverage in highlands
and islands from 17 per cent in 2003 to 40 per cent this
year.
- The Scottish Borders Rural Broadband project is
providing a wireless Broadband connection to up to 1,000
users in the Borders.
- 9,000 SMEs have applied for the Business Incentive
Scheme since its launch in 2003. The scheme provides
subsidies of up to £1,200 for SMEs taking up their first
broadband connection.
Codyne Limited received assistance from Scottish
Enterprise's Business Gateway high growth start-up team and
receives ongoing support through SE Grampian.