Telecommunications: Vodafone finds partners for fiber optic expansion

telecommunications
Vodafone finds partners for fiber optic expansion

During work in the district of Northwest Mecklenburg, fiber optic cables are blown into house connections through differently colored empty pipes. The telecommunications group Vodafone wants to get into fiber optic expansion in Germany on a large scale. photo

© Jens Büttner/dpa-Zentralbild/dpa

Data throughput is increasing rapidly, stable transmission is extremely important. Glass fiber is seen as the technology of the future. With some delay, Vodafone is now also heading for “Fiber to the Home”.

After Deutsche Telekom and other Internet providers, the telecommunications group Vodafone also wants to get into fiber optic expansion in Germany on a large scale. Vodafone announced on Monday in Düsseldorf that they want to set up a joint venture with the Luxembourg financial holding company Altice, which will invest up to seven billion euros within six years. The goal is to make fiber optics available in seven million households, reaching into the apartments. The company is to be founded in the first half of 2023.

It is about so-called FTTH connections (“Fiber to the Home”). So far, Vodafone has only a few such connections, currently there are just over 40,000. Instead of FTTH, the company relies on television cable as the transmission path. Pure fiber optic Internet is considered more stable and faster, but such contracts are also more expensive for customers.

Vodafone is late with the expansion plans. Deutsche Telekom already ramped up its investments in 2020 and is picking up the pace. In mid-2022, Bonn was at 3.9 million. In an interim step, their FTTH network should be available in 10 million households by 2024. The expansion is then to continue, with Telekom also relying in part on a joint venture with Australian investors. Two years ago, Telefónica and the Allianz insurance group announced the establishment of a joint venture that intends to invest five billion euros within six years.

partners wanted

Vodafone is now taking a similar path to its competitors and is looking to close ranks with an external partner to handle the expensive fiber optic expansion. The debt that the planned company will take on will not weigh on the balance sheet.

80 percent of the FTTH connections should be located where Vodafone already has television cables, especially in apartment buildings and apartment buildings. There, customers then have the option of switching to pure fiber optics. 20 percent are to be built where no Vodafone landline network is available. Vodafone boss Nick Read spoke of an important infrastructure investment that will help to achieve the federal government’s broadband goals. The government wants Germany to have nationwide fiber optic coverage by 2030.

In the joint venture deal, Vodafone is providing a moderate cash injection, with most of the investment being financed through the joint venture’s debt. Over the years, Vodafone has received up to 1.2 billion euros from Altice for access to television cable customers. The cash injection that Vodafone is giving to set up the company will reportedly be less than the total amount that the company will receive.

Partner already active in Germany

The partner Altice is no stranger to Europe’s Internet industry, the financial holding holds shares in telecommunications companies in France and Portugal, among other places. Altice is already active in Germany through its subsidiary Geodesia.

Vodafone also announced on Monday that it is providing investments to upgrade its cable TV network. More distribution boxes (fiber optic nodes) are to be created and the upload speed is to be increased. With its current fixed network, Vodafone already relies largely on fiber optics. But on the last mile – that is, the stretch into the apartment – there are said television cables. They enable a download speed of up to 1 gigabit per second.

Report from Vodafone Germany Report from the British parent company Vodafone Group

dpa

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