• Comprehensive economic modelling published by the Cebr for Virgin Media O2 finds access to excellent digital connectivity1 in rural areas could add an extra £65.1 billion to the UK economy and increase employment by 6.8% through the creation of hundreds of thousands of new jobs
  • The report finds potential for rural tourism businesses to increase turnover by 9.9% and boost employment by 3.8%
  • Illustrating the transformative power of connectivity in rural areas, Virgin Media O2 is using the latest satellite technology to bring mobile connectivity to a nature reserve at South Stack, Wales, enabling businesses to take card payments more easily and allowing the site manager, RSPB, to track birds instantly at the location for the first time
  • The company is expanding its network in rural areas, having recently upgraded mobile coverage in an area covering almost 2,200km² through the Shared Rural Network programme, and is calling for planning reform so more communities can benefit from enhanced connectivity sooner.

 

26th July 2023 – Improved rural connectivity could boost the UK economy by £65.1 billion, new economic modelling from the Cebr for Virgin Media O2 has found. The report, titled ‘The Great Rural Revival’, addresses four sectors central to the UK’s rural economy – tourism, agriculture, manufacturing, and small businesses – and finds connectivity improvements could boost rural employment by 6.8%, creating an additional 284,000 new jobs.

Over the last decade, digital connectivity has been improved in rural communities across the UK, creating new opportunities within previously disconnected regions. However, a digital divide remains between rural and urban communities2, which is preventing rural communities and economies from achieving their growth potential, with many areas still unable to access reliable connectivity.

The analysis within The Great Rural Revival report shows that across the UK, the East of England would benefit most from digital connectivity upgrades, unlocking a £12 billion boost for the local economy and 42,000 new jobs. Other regions set to benefit include the South West, where the local economy could unlock £7 billion and benefit from 39,000 new jobs, as well as Wales, where £5 billion could be unlocked alongside 25,000 jobs. The regional analysis demonstrates how improving rural connectivity directly supports the government’s levelling up agenda, which aims to spread opportunities more equally across the UK.

The Great Rural Revival highlights how improved connectivity could enable and power new technologies which transform rural economies and life – from drone farming and smart livestock monitoring, to wearable technology and automated booking apps for the hospitality sector. Meanwhile, around a quarter of rural business decision makers surveyed as part of the report said they would make greater use of technologies such as cashless payments, video calling/conferencing or online booking if connectivity was improved.

Jeanie York, Chief Technology Officer at Virgin Media O2 said “At a time when communities across the UK are struggling, this new analysis demonstrates how improved rural connectivity could herald a Great Rural Revival. The last decade has seen fixed and mobile networks rolled out to new corners of the UK, and now the transformational potential of connectivity has been made clear with the ability to unlock £65 billion of new growth in rural areas.

“Through working closely with industry partners, the UK Government, planning authorities and landowners, we can deliver the essential network upgrades that will help to bridge the rural-urban connectivity divide, provide faster and more reliable coverage and unlock new jobs and growth in the process.”

Connectivity-enabled innovation in rural areas

To help realise the benefits that enhanced connectivity can bring to rural tourism, Virgin Media O2 has partnered with the Welsh Government and rural coverage experts Wavemobile, to bring next generation connectivity to historic not-spots.

The first area in the UK to benefit is South Stack, a nature reserve and popular tourist destination in rural Wales managed by the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB), where new technology has brought permanent mobile connectivity to the area for the first time. Visitors can now reliably access mobile signal in the area, and card payments can be taken at the visitor centre in a boost to the local economy.

The isolated area is benefitting from connectivity after Virgin Media O2 brought together a range of technologies to offer services in a cost-effective way. Typically, mobile phone masts require a fibre cable to carry calls, SMS and data to and from the phone mast – a connection known in the industry as ‘backhaul’ – but that is not viable in this extremely remote location. Instead, a network of low-earth orbit satellites are providing backhaul services to a Wavemobile radio, enabling Virgin Media O2 to provide a reliable and high-speed mobile network to the area. It was installed at South Stack last week.

The equipment is the size of a shoebox and can take as little as five minutes to install. It can provide 4G coverage to an area of several kilometres.

The service enables near real-time tracking of wildlife, using special ultra-low power LoRaWAN sensors3 and a technique called Time Difference of Arrival (TDoA)4, enabling the RSPB to track a bird’s location, or when they’re nesting or feeding.

Wales’ Economy Minister, Vaughan Gething MS said: “It’s great to see Virgin Media O2 and Wavemobile continue to invest in R&D in Wales, supporting the Morlais tidal energy project and addressing a historically challenging mobile notspot.

“Bringing reliable 4G connectivity to the area will not only dramatically improve the mobile signal for the local community, businesses and visitors – enabling them to use online services using the very latest Internet of Things technology, but using satellite technology will also ensure the development does not negatively impact marine wildlife.”

Boosting UK tourism

In the rural tourism sector, the Great Rural Revival shows that improved connectivity could result in a 9.9% increase in turnover, equating to an extra £842 million per year. Since the pandemic, tourism across rural parts of the UK has soared, with countryside retreats accounting for nearly half of all Airbnb bookings in 2021, compared with 23% in 2019. Meanwhile, disruption to international travel in 2022 saw British hotels, B&Bs and holiday parks record a 20-30% rise in enquiries.

The Great Rural Revival shows that with new applications and digital connectivity rapidly changing the way people travel, spend and behave, the rural tourism industry could benefit from embracing new technology and ways of working.

Robert Beauchamp, Managing Economist Cebr comments Our findings highlight how improved digital connectivity could unleash growth in the rural economy. These impacts would mainly be felt outside London, in regions like the North West, South West, and Yorkshire & the Humber. Improved connectivity could allow rural businesses to be more efficient, make full use of digital technologies, and create more jobs to strengthen the rural economy. Without improved rural connectivity, problems which could be solved will instead remain and the opportunities related to better connectivity would not be realised, meaning rural communities will continue to underperform relative to their urban counterparts.”

Virgin Media O2’s commitment to rural connectivity

Virgin Media O2 remains committed to increasing its coverage in rural areas and signal not-spots, closing the connectivity gap between urban and rural areas. As part of the UK Government’s Shared Rural Network (SRN), Virgin Media O2 has recently further expanded its 4G network to an additional 50 sites across rural communities, bolstering coverage across an area covering almost 2,200km² – around the size of Herefordshire. This includes upgrades at numerous tourist hotspots such as the Scottish Highlands and the Hebrides, Kent, East Sussex and Yorkshire, and it has secured planning consent for works at a further 100 sites.

While SRN upgrades continue to be delivered at pace, Virgin Media O2 is calling on policy makers, planning authorities and landlords to remove obstacles and ensure rural communities fulfil their potential. Specifically, the company wants rules in place making it faster, easier and lower-cost to provide the infrastructure that is required to deliver the connectivity customers rely on.

Read the full report here

 

-ENDS-

 

Economic research methodology

The backbone of the economic impact modelling was the survey, from which we could derive the difference of quality in rural and urban connectivity, and by how much turnover and employment could increase if rural businesses had excellent digital connectivity. We then scaled these results to the size of the 2022 UK economy. We presented two different sets of results: the effects on the rural economy if businesses had perfect connectivity, and the effects if they reached the urban level of connectivity. Results were further broken down by major UK region and industries. We also modelled the effects of having periods of complete loss of service, and how mitigating these could lead to further turnover increase. Lastly, we estimated how the availability of video calls at work can save employees time and how the lack of need to travel to conferences can increase productivity further.

Polling methodology [research provided by Opinium]

The survey was conducted by Opinium and asked 1096 respondents with a decision-making role on tasks related to digital connectivity. The results were broken down by the industries in scope (agriculture, tourism, and manufacturing). The survey consisted of both quantitative questions to help generate the data required to model the impacts of improved digital connectivity, and qualitative questions to provide further insight into the challenges faced by rural businesses.

Note to editors

  1. Excellent connectivity was defined as a score of ‘10’ for both fixed and mobile connectivity when survey respondents were asked to rate the quality of their connectivity. This was then used alongside questions around anticipated turnover and employment changes to calculate the impact to the rural economy as a whole.
  2. Superfast business broadband coverage is available for 95% of urban areas in England, this drops to 79% for rural areas (according to Connected Nations 2021. Ofcom, 2021. Link) and 59% of rural premises exist without 4G from all operators, compared to just 17% of urban premises (Building the UK’s digital infrastructure. House of Commons, 2020. Link)
  3. LoRaWAN sensors are IoT devices that integrate measurement capability and the transmission of this data through a public or private LoRaWAN network. All LoRaWAN sensors are compatible with all available public or private LoRaWAN networks, and all LoRaWAN compatible gateways.
  4. TDoA is a positioning methodology that determines the difference between the time-of-arrival (ToA) of radio signals. TDoA is used in a real-time location system(RTLS) to accurately calculate the location of tracked entities, such as tracking tags affixed to personnel or key assets, in real time.
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