The head of BT has defended the telecoms giant against claims it is being unfairly propped up by the Government to roll out fibre broadband across the country.
Ian Livingston blasted its critics as “copper Luddites” for trying to hold the UK back from fibre, which can be four times faster than existing networks.
BT is spending £2.5 billion of its own cash to connect two-thirds of the country to the new network by the end of next year.
But it plans to tap Government help to reach rural areas that are less commercially viable.
Recently Sir Charles Dunstone, the billionaire founder of mobile phone retailer Carphone Warehouse which owned BT rival TalkTalk until 2010, called for regulatory intervention to ensure this state help remains in the public interest.
TalkTalk chief executive Dido Harding has also waded into the row, addingthat more needs to be done to avoid propping up a “monopoly provider”. She pointed to how Fujitsu recently left a £680 million bidding process for Government-backed rural broadband contracts, leaving BT as the “only eligible competitor”.
But Mr Livingston shrugged off claims that BT was rebuilding its former monopoly, highlighting rules that force it to pay the same cost to access its network as competitors such as TalkTalk.
“These criticisms are coming from people I can only describe as copper Luddites. They don’t want to see the UK getting fibre. BT fibre is open to any provider in the UK on the same terms as BT there are 50 or 60 of them; that’s not what I call a monopoly.”
Back in 2006 the company was forced to split itself up to create Openreach, which manages the country’s telecoms infrastructure and treats the rest of BT on an equal basis to other operators.
BT is also not the only player rolling out super-fast broadband services, with Virgin Media covering a vast swathe of the country with its own fibre network.
Together they are estimated to cover roughly 95% of the UK superfast broadband market.