BT is to invest £1.5bn in fibre optic cables, giving up to 10 million UK households access to faster broadband.
The plans would bring 40% of homes in reach of an ultra-fast service by 2012.
BT is also planning to put fibre-optic cable into about 1 million homes, making the service even faster for those customers.
However, the communications group has made clear it will only make the move if regulator Ofcom allows it to get a decent return on that investment.
Remaining customers would be offered broadband speeds of between 40 and 60 megabits a second (mbps), it said.
In order to pay for the project BT has said it will suspend its £2.5bn share buy-back programme in July - by which time it will have returned more than £1.8bn.
"Broadband has boosted the UK economy and is now an essential part of our customers' lives," said BT chief executive Ian Livingston.
"We now want to make a step-change in broadband provision which will offer faster speeds than ever before. This marks the beginning of a new chapter in Britain's broadband story."
But the firm has warned that conditions need to be right for its investment.
BT has urged Ofcom to nurture a "supportive and enduring regulatory environment" which includes removing current barriers to investment and making sure that anyone who chooses to invest in fibre optics can earn a fair rate of return for their shareholders.
Britain has been slower to invest in fast broadband than some countries, with BT in particular cautious about spending the large sums involved.
The group's plans should enable homes to run so-called "multiple bandwidth-hungry applications" which would enable some family members to watch high definition movies while others were gaming or working on complex graphics projects.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/7506742.stm
Published: 2008/07/15 06:35:20 GMT
© BBC MMVIII
The plans would bring 40% of homes in reach of an ultra-fast service by 2012.
BT is also planning to put fibre-optic cable into about 1 million homes, making the service even faster for those customers.
However, the communications group has made clear it will only make the move if regulator Ofcom allows it to get a decent return on that investment.
Remaining customers would be offered broadband speeds of between 40 and 60 megabits a second (mbps), it said.
In order to pay for the project BT has said it will suspend its £2.5bn share buy-back programme in July - by which time it will have returned more than £1.8bn.
"Broadband has boosted the UK economy and is now an essential part of our customers' lives," said BT chief executive Ian Livingston.
"We now want to make a step-change in broadband provision which will offer faster speeds than ever before. This marks the beginning of a new chapter in Britain's broadband story."
But the firm has warned that conditions need to be right for its investment.
BT has urged Ofcom to nurture a "supportive and enduring regulatory environment" which includes removing current barriers to investment and making sure that anyone who chooses to invest in fibre optics can earn a fair rate of return for their shareholders.
Britain has been slower to invest in fast broadband than some countries, with BT in particular cautious about spending the large sums involved.
The group's plans should enable homes to run so-called "multiple bandwidth-hungry applications" which would enable some family members to watch high definition movies while others were gaming or working on complex graphics projects.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/7506742.stm
Published: 2008/07/15 06:35:20 GMT
© BBC MMVIII