Technology & Innovation

BT, fibre and IPTV

May 12, 2010

Global

May 12, 2010

Global
Our Editors

The Economist Intelligence Unit

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Tim Whitley, chief strategy officer of BT, says the investment case for the company’s fibre-optic network plan is based on the need for higher bandwidth in the market, as services like catch-up TV, video-on-demand and multi-room HDTV (high-definition TV) take off. Yet, for many years the company resisted a rollout, prompting criticism from industry observers that the UK would end up lagging its European peers on broadband capability.

A major factor in this change of approach has been the willingness of Ofcom, the UK regulator, to grant BT more control over the wholesale pricing of its fibre-optic network than it enjoys with copper. Another has been the activity of Virgin Media, a cable rival, which has upped the pace and marketing of its own high-speed network deployment. Both developments led to a commitment from BT in 2008 to spend £1.5bn on rolling out a fibre-optic network to about 40% of UK homes.

Not all observers are convinced by the plan, however. For a start, the project mainly involves building fibre only as far as the street cabinet, not the home. If, in future, the demand for bandwidth forces BT to be more ambitious, an upgrade would make the overall project more expensive than if BT had built to the home in the first place. Second, the Conservative Party has indicated that, should it win the forthcoming general election, it will force BT to make its underground ducts available to rival infrastructure providers. Such a move would weaken BT’s investment case considerably.

The biggest concern, perhaps, is about revenue potential. A rich TV service would help, yet BT Vision—the operator’s IPTV offering— is dwarfed by the TV services of Sky, a satellite operator, and Virgin Media. BT is collaborating with UK broadcasters on Project Canvas—aimed at creating an open platform that allows content companies to provide services for the TV. This could certainly attract new customers to broadband, and challenge the pay-TV incumbents, but the revenue model remains unclear. Indeed, Mr Whitley believes that Canvas will help to ensure that the enormous consumer benefits of Internet-connected TV are not restricted to paying customers, and that BT Vision would be able to offer bundles that are extremely competitive in comparison with existing pay-TV providers. No wonder it is so fiercely opposed by Sky. 

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