London — Britain’s biggest telecoms group BT has reached
an agreement with the regulator to finally resolve a two-year row over
how the national broadband network is run, agreeing to a legal
separation of the business.
BT has come under fire after rivals including Sky, TalkTalk and Vodafone accused Openreach, the division that supplies broadband to millions of homes and businesses, of delivering a poor service.
BT’s rivals say Openreach does not invest enough in the network, particularly in fibre optics, which currently connect only 2% of premises, and is run to serve BT’s bottom line rather than the interests of Britain’s broadband needs.
On Friday BT said it had agreed to legally separate its broadband unit, Openreach, moving 32,000 staff into the new company, which will have its own brand without the BT logo.
The Openreach CEO will report to the Openre
ach chairman, while keeping accountability to the BT CEO with certain legal and fiduciary duties.
"This has been a long and challenging review where we have been balancing a number of competing interests," BT CEO Gavin Patterson said. "We have listened to criticism of our business and as a result are willing to make fundamental changes to the way Openreach will work in the future."
Ofcom, which wants BT Openreach to plough more money into upgrading its copper networks to fibre to catch up to some European rivals and the likes of South Korea and Japan, had threatened to go to the European Commission to try to force its case.
It said on Friday that the proposals put forward by BT meant it would no longer need to impose these changes through regulation. "The reforms have been designed to begin this year," it said.
Reuters

BT has come under fire after rivals including Sky, TalkTalk and Vodafone accused Openreach, the division that supplies broadband to millions of homes and businesses, of delivering a poor service.
BT’s rivals say Openreach does not invest enough in the network, particularly in fibre optics, which currently connect only 2% of premises, and is run to serve BT’s bottom line rather than the interests of Britain’s broadband needs.
On Friday BT said it had agreed to legally separate its broadband unit, Openreach, moving 32,000 staff into the new company, which will have its own brand without the BT logo.
The Openreach CEO will report to the Openre
ach chairman, while keeping accountability to the BT CEO with certain legal and fiduciary duties.
"This has been a long and challenging review where we have been balancing a number of competing interests," BT CEO Gavin Patterson said. "We have listened to criticism of our business and as a result are willing to make fundamental changes to the way Openreach will work in the future."
Ofcom, which wants BT Openreach to plough more money into upgrading its copper networks to fibre to catch up to some European rivals and the likes of South Korea and Japan, had threatened to go to the European Commission to try to force its case.
It said on Friday that the proposals put forward by BT meant it would no longer need to impose these changes through regulation. "The reforms have been designed to begin this year," it said.
Reuters
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