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PRIVACY
Economic Development

Boosting digital infrastructure in rural Wales 'could unlock £5bn'

A new report has been published by Cebr and Virgin Media O2

South Stack Cliffs Nature Reserve in Anglesey has benefitted from improved internet connection

The Welsh economy could benefit from a £5bn boost and 25,000 jobs if rural communities had better access to fast and reliable internet connectivity, according to new economic modelling. New research published by the Centre for Economics and Business Research (Cebr) for Virgin Media O2, shows improved digital connectivity in rural areas could add an extra £65.1bn to the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ economy.

The Great Rural Revival report addresses four sectors central to the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’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 nationwide.

It found that, while digital infrastructure has improved in rural areas across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ over the last decade, there is still a divide between rural and urban communities. This, it said, is preventing rural economies from growing with many areas still unable to access reliable connectivity.

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The analysis within the report showed that Wales’ local economy could unlock £5bn and benefit from 25,000 new jobs if better internet connectivity was available. The report suggests that new technologies, such as drone farming and smart livestock monitoring could transform rural economies. Other technologies could be wearable tech and automated booking apps for the hospitality sector.

A quarter of rural businesses surveyed said they would make greater use of technologies such as cashless payments, video calling and conferencing, or online booking if connectivity was improved. In response, Virgin Media O2 said it has partnered with the Welsh Government and rural coverage network Wavemobile to provide digital infrastructure to remote parts of Wales.

The first area to benefit is at South Stack Cliffs Nature Reserve, in Anglesey. Virgin Media O2 deployed satellite technology to provide mobile connection and enable businesses to take card payments more easily and allowed the site manager, RSPB, to track birds instantly at the location for the first time.

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.