The £6.4 million Mobile Access North Yorkshire (MANY) initiative, which has been partly funded by the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, will help to establish new enterprises in the deeply rural area, while also helping existing businesses to flourish.
The project is seen as a particular boost to the tourism sector, which is a cornerstone of the Yorkshire Dales’ economy and the wider £9bn visitor industry across the region.
It is also being seen as a key component of the Government’s levelling up agenda, which is aimed at tackling regional inequalities across the country, and helping to bridge the digital divide between urban and rural areas.
North Yorkshire County Council’s executive member for digital connectivity, Cllr Greg White, said: “North Yorkshire is leading the way in the development of new 5G technology. This network will empower our rural communities and help our visitor economy to become even more successful.
“We are committed to supporting businesses and households with the best services and we would like to thank all of our partners in the ground-breaking MANY project, which has the potential to be replicated across all rural communities.”
The initiative is backed by a consortium including North Yorkshire County Council, and has been rolled out in Coverdale, which is a steep-sided valley in the far east of the Yorkshire Dales National Park.
The dale is home to a number of small villages, including Carlton, West Scrafton, Melmerby and Agglethorpe, and has a population of 1,000 people.
Due to its remote location, Coverdale has suffered from poor connectivity with broadband speeds five times slower than the national average, putting local companies at a competitive disadvantage.
The new ultrafast broadband network will create opportunities for businesses to improve engagement with visitors as well as the chance to increase revenues. Business owners will be able to boost their online presence and adopt the latest cloud-based software to increase innovation, productivity and profitability.
The award-winning tourist attraction, The Forbidden Corner, is among the first businesses to benefit. It is using the ultrafast broadband technology to enhance the attraction with augmented reality applications within its labyrinth of tunnels, chambers and follies.
Another business to benefit is The Saddle Rooms, a hospitality and wedding venue, which is using the connectivity to attract, recruit and retain high-quality staff and improve communications across its 400-acre site.
In addition, the ultrafast broadband network will be used to boost health and well-being by combating loneliness and isolation and connecting residents in Coverdale to digital NHS services.
It will also be used to monitor roads to help protect against the devastation of flash flooding, which left parts of the Yorkshire Dales badly affected following a deluge in July 2019.
Digital Infrastructure Minister Julia Lopez said: “My priority is levelling up rural areas with the same connectivity enjoyed in towns and cities, and that’s exactly what we’re doing in Coverdale by funding this new 5G network.
“The benefits for the area are huge. Local tourist attractions have already been brought into the 21st century using state-of-the-art augmented reality tech, and the network will connect those suffering with loneliness as well as limiting flood damage by monitoring the state of local roads.
“This is just part of our plan to put rural Yorkshire in the digital fast lane through our £5 billion Project Gigabit that is bringing top-of-the-range broadband to communities across the region.”
Quickline Communications Ltd, the East Riding-based internet service provider, is currently offering 5G Fixed Wireless Access (FWA) connectivity up to nine kilometres from the nearest mast with the ambition to extend this up to 18 kilometres as the technology matures.
The chief executive officer at Quickline Communications, Sean Royce, said: “This is a perfect example of how we are delivering life-changing services to individuals, businesses and communities in rural areas that have previously been ignored by other providers.
“Having lightning fast, reliable internet is an absolute necessity, and this project will ensure that the connectivity received in this part of North Yorkshire will far exceed even that experienced by others in many towns and cities right across the UK.
“It is also vital in terms of levelling up the North. Rural businesses can start to compete with other regions on a more level playing field and it will open up new markets for them.
“People can confidently work from home, children and students can access online lessons and lectures, they can socialise, stream music, listen to podcasts and watch TV programmes as well as shop online.
“These are all basic needs and wants – and we are thrilled to be paving the way for communities in the most isolated parts of North Yorkshire.”
The North Yorkshire Rural Commission, which was established by North Yorkshire County Council to look at potential solutions to a host of issues affecting the countryside, claimed that digital connectivity for both internet and mobile coverage is now a “basic human right” in the 21st century.
A final report by the independent commission published in July last year warned that online connectivity in rural parts of North Yorkshire is lagging behind urban areas, hindering economic growth and leaving tens of thousands of businesses and households affected by technology blackspots.
Research by the North Yorkshire Rural Commission revealed that a fifth of all rural areas in the county have no broadband connection, compared with seven per cent in urban areas.
Among the proposals put forward by the commission to tackle the technology divide was a digital inclusion group established by the National Park authorities for the Yorkshire Dales and the North York Moors.
The Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport was also urged to place a higher priority on digital inclusion in rural communities and use the Government’s Shared Prosperity Fund to set out a strategic approach for North Yorkshire and other sparsely populated areas.
Efforts are already under way to help boost connectivity after the county council invested £85m and launched a company, NYnet Ltd, to improve digital and broadband services across North Yorkshire.
A rural taskforce has been established by North Yorkshire County Council which is looking at taking forward the Rural Commission’s recommendations, and is due to publish a report later this year.
The consortium overseeing the ultrafast broadband project includes aql ltd, Cybermoor 5G Services, Flo-culture, Lancaster University, Quickline Communications, SafeNetics, the University of York and Wireless Coverage.
The MANY project is part of the Department of Digital, Culture, Media and Sport’s 5G Testbeds and Trials programme. The Government has provided £4.4 million in funding, with the remaining £2 million coming from private businesses involved in the initiative.