Home
 » ISP News, Key Developments » 
Sponsored Links

Scotland Partly Pauses R100 Gigabit Broadband Voucher Applications

Tuesday, Aug 6th, 2024 (9:35 am) - Score 1,600
scotland 3d broadband map uk

The Scottish Government (SG) has confirmed to ISPreview that they will be introducing a “temporary pause” on Scottish Broadband Voucher Scheme (SBVS) applications for gigabit-capable projects covering multiple premises, which is intended to ensure the “best use of public funds” and to help “deliver an optimised roll out schedule“.

The SBVS is designed to complement the SG’s £600m Reaching 100% (R100) broadband upgrade project with Openreach (BT), which is because R100 alone won’t be enough to upgrade every single property. As a result, the SBVS was setup to offer homes in disadvantaged areas the ability to take a subsidy of up to £5,000 to help cover the installation costs of a 30Mbps+ capable network, which can be combined with vouchers from other premises to help build a new local network (nearly 6,000 premises in Scotland have benefitted from the vouchers).

NOTE: The responsibility for broadband in Scotland is reserved to Westminster, but that doesn’t stop local and devolved authorities from making their own investments (e.g. R100). Ofcom reports that 75% of Scotland could access a gigabit-capable broadband network in Jan 2024 and over 96% can get 30Mbps+ (here), but gigabit coverage could reach 83-85% by May 2026 (here).

However, some suppliers for the voucher scheme in Scotland recently informed ISPreview that the SG is planning to put a “pause” on new applications for broadband vouchers from Monday 19th August 2024, which specifically impacts PRPs / Pre Registered Packages (i.e. this is where a supplier / network operator bundles vouchers together, such as when aiming to upgrade a whole village in one project).

Advertisement

The main reason for this is because the SG wants to avoid clashing (i.e. duplicating public investment) with the UK Government’s Project Gigabit programme, which has separately allocated £450m (here) to help spread 1Gbps broadband speeds into some of the most remote rural areas of Scotland.

The associated Building Digital UK (BDUK) agency has previously estimated that some 410,000 premises across Scotland may need support from public funding to help them gain access to gigabit broadband speeds in the future (here).

Crucially, the first large build procurements under the new Project Gigabit scheme have already launched (example) and so, much like the recent situation in Wales (here), it has become necessary to pause a major part of SBVS until the exact coverage plan for contracts under the new project have been determined. The UK’s central Gigabit Broadband Voucher Scheme (GBVS) is already suspended across much of the country, including in Scotland, for the same reason.

An SG Spokesperson told ISPreview:

“The R100 Scottish Broadband Voucher Scheme (SBVS) is a key component of our strategy to maximise broadband coverage in Scotland. We can confirm that there are no changes to the Scheme for individual properties, with applications for both superfast and gigabit-capable solutions open as usual. Property owners and residents can keep up-to-date on voucher eligibility for their property via our address checker.

Following the launch of the first Project Gigabit procurements in Scotland in May 2024, there will be a temporary pause on SBVS applications for gigabit-capable projects covering multiple premises. A similar pause is being made by the UK Government to ensure best use of public funds and deliver an optimised roll out schedule.

Applications for superfast [30Mbps+] projects covering multiple premises remain unaffected.”

The fact that the scheme is still open to individual applications may be a moot point, since suppliers often have to use PRPs to make the economics of a remote rural broadband build work and support efficient network delivery. By comparison, individual vouchers may be more viable for infill and extensions of an existing network, rather than new community-wide deployments.

Advertisement

The difficult reality here for suppliers to the voucher scheme with pending voucher schemes and the communities involved is that they will face some costly disruption, which may be enough to place some of their proposed broadband deployment projects into a state of limbo (we’ve already seen this happen before in England). But any already approved voucher projects should be able to carry on as normal (the same goes for those already submitted in a final format and undergoing approvals).

Project Gigabit ultimately aims to help extend 1000Mbps (download) capable broadband networks to reach at least 85% of UK premises by the end of 2025 (currently 83.4%) and then “nationwide” coverage (c. 99%) by 2030 (here). But those figures are an average, and actual coverage may vary around the country.

Share with Twitter
Share with Linkedin
Share with Facebook
Share with Reddit
Share with Pinterest
Mark-Jackson
By Mark Jackson
Mark is a professional technology writer, IT consultant and computer engineer from Dorset (England), he also founded ISPreview in 1999 and enjoys analysing the latest telecoms and broadband developments. Find me on X (Twitter), Mastodon, Facebook, BlueSky, Threads.net and .
Search ISP News
Search ISP Listings
Search ISP Reviews
Comments
1 Response

Advertisement

  1. Avatar photo Peter Delaney says:

    It is a great pity that, once again, vouchers take a back seat.

    A voucher project is purely demand led. If a community is fed up with terrible broadband, then vouchers are a great way of helping to finance a solution. Find a supplier willing to help and you get your better broadband in an involving and direct way.

    Regional procurements, on the other hand, are big county-scale contracts between government and suppliers, all under the cloak of commercial sensitivity.

    Regular folks really aren’t involved in the process.

    Long term build plans are not made public and only when build is imminent will a community get to know that. Otherwise, they keep waiting for the supplier to get to them at some indeterminate point over the next few years, if at all.

    In the end, and to get scale, regional projects are probably necessary. However, their size, duration and opaqueness mean it’s difficult to understand if this is the best use of taxpayer money.

    Perhaps smaller, more agile and less bureaucratic contracts would have been better.

    A specific requirement to publish build plans would certainly have helped – the least suppliers could do for all that taxpayer cash.

    But, we are where we are.

Comments are closed

Cheap BIG ISPs for 100Mbps+
Community Fibre UK ISP Logo
100Mbps
Gift: None
Vodafone UK ISP Logo
Vodafone £22.00
150Mbps
Gift: None
Plusnet UK ISP Logo
Plusnet £22.99
145Mbps
Gift: £125 Reward Card
Youfibre UK ISP Logo
Youfibre £23.99
150Mbps
Gift: None
Virgin Media UK ISP Logo
Virgin Media £24.99
264Mbps
Gift: First 3 Months Free
Large Availability | View All
Promotion
Cheap Unlimited Mobile SIMs
Talkmobile UK ISP Logo
Talkmobile £16.95
Contract: 1 Month
Data: Unlimited
iD Mobile UK ISP Logo
iD Mobile £17.00
Contract: 24 Months
Data: Unlimited
ASDA Mobile UK ISP Logo
ASDA Mobile £19.00
Contract: 24 Months
Data: Unlimited
Sky UK ISP Logo
Sky £20.00
Contract: 12 Months
Data: Unlimited
Smarty UK ISP Logo
Smarty £20.00
Contract: 1 Month
Data: Unlimited
Cheapest ISPs for 100Mbps+
toob UK ISP Logo
toob £18.00
150Mbps
Gift: None
Gigaclear UK ISP Logo
Gigaclear £19.00
300Mbps
Gift: None
Community Fibre UK ISP Logo
100Mbps
Gift: None
Vodafone UK ISP Logo
Vodafone £22.00
150Mbps
Gift: None
Lightning Fibre UK ISP Logo
150Mbps
Gift: None
Large Availability | View All
Promotion
Sponsored

Copyright © 1999 to Present - ISPreview.co.uk - All Rights Reserved - Terms , Privacy and Cookie Policy , Links , Website Rules , Contact