6 December 2007 16:01 GMT / By Katie Scott
A British firm is claiming that by using the UK's sewer network, it can drastically cut down the costs of connecting the country to broadband.The company, called H20 Networks, is currently looking into providing networks to businesses and individual consumers.
Internet Service Provider Ask4 has already signed up and managing director Elfed Thomas hopes the UK could soon compete with Japan and Paris where use of the sewer system is widespread.
"The sewer network is more than capable of handling cable. There is no reason why this can't be deployed throughout the UK."
He added that there is, in fact, 360,000 miles of sewers in the UK and this is ideal for widening broadband access.
H2O Networks began installing broadband fibres in sewer systems in 2003 but its negotiations with water firms nationwide continues.
Focus (Fibre Optical Cable Underground Sewer) is already proving universities in Aberdeen, Edinburgh and Bournemouth with 20GB/s connections with speeds of up to 20GB/s.
According to the company,the key advantage is cost. Laying cables for broadband has so far involved digging up roads across the country, which is not only expensive (around £150-200 per metre) but also disruptive. But by using the sewer, they claim this is avoided and the man hour costs are reduced significantly.
Managing director Elfed Thomas told the BBC: "To roll out a networking deploying fibre over a 2km area would be 6 to 12 months in the planning. We can do it physically in 4 hours".
Using the example of Napian University, he continued: "It cost the university around £80,000 to have a 1.2km fibre network. With a traditional fibre network these costs would have been in the region of £400,000 to £1.2m".
Thomas adds that the charge for having a 10MB/s or 20GB/s is the same as there are less restrictions on capacity. Software, Broadband, Online, H2O Audio


Acer CloudMobile Ice Cream Sandwich smartphone set for MWC launch 4.3-inch award winner
Best iPhone utilities apps Resistance is futilities?
Best iPhone productivity apps Speedy
Samsung Galaxy S III: Review of rumours, features, pictures and specs Thinner, faster, better
New HTC Ice Cream Sandwich device pictures leak Another one for the rumour pile...
Nokia 700 Sleek and desirable Nokia
LG Miracle picture and details leak Update: More pictures from the wild
Samsung O table is for the kitchen of the future Flexible hob
HTC dates Ice Cream Sandwich update, Sensation models get it first End of March
Google home entertainment device detailed WSJ solves device mystery
Samsung not worried by Apple iTV threat EXCLUSIVE: AV boss not concerned
More leaked iPad 3 parts help form bigger picture - including Sharp Retina display iPad 3, in kit form
Tesla Model X SUV goes back to the future DeLorean lookalike announced
Samsung Galaxy Tab 2 (7.0) pictures and hands-on Up close with the ICS tablet
APP OF THE DAY: Tweetbot review (iPad) Should a Twitter app cost?
Panasonic Lumix GX1 review
The one?
Sony PlayStation Vita review
Curriculum Vita
Nokia Lumia 710 review
WP7 on a budget
GoPro HD Hero2 review
Amazing things come in small packages
HTC Explorer review
A phone for people who make calls
BlackBerry Torch 9810 review
Middle of the road
Sony Alpha A65 review
Affordable SLT. But is it a DSLR-beater?
Fiat 500 TwinAir Plus review
Two-cylinder beast
BlackBerry Bold 9790 review
To boldly go where we've already been before
Motorola MotoACTV review
Just add exercise
Motorola Xoom 2 Media Edition review
Mini Xoom
Sennheiser IE80 review
Tune that bass
BlackBerry Porsche Design P'9981 review
For the fast lane
Kingston Wi-Drive review
Expand your storage
Huawei Ideos X3 review
Cheap but imperfect