* Networks and government propose 1 billion pound plan
* Four networks plan to share masts in some rural areas
* Govt will invest to build new shared infrastructure in not
spots
(Adds detail, further quotes)
By Paul Sandle
LONDON, Oct 25 (Reuters) - Britain's four mobile network
operators have agreed to build a shared rural network, backed by
government funds, banishing countryside "not-spots" where
consumers are unable to get an adequate signal.
EE, Vodafone, O2 and Three
will collectively spend 532 million pounds ($684 million) over
20 years, according to the plan published on Friday, potentially
supported by a 500 million pound investment from the government.
The operators would invest in new and existing phone masts
they would all share under the proposal, which the government
hopes will be formalised early next year.
Digital Secretary Nicky Morgan said she is determined to
make sure no part of the country is left behind in mobile
connectivity.
"Brokering an agreement for mast sharing between networks
alongside new investment in mobile infrastructure will mean
people get good 4G signal no matter where they are or which
provider they're with," she said.
"But it is not yet a done deal and I want to see industry
move quickly so we can reach a final agreement early next year."
The operators have agreed to share existing masts and
infrastructure in areas where there is coverage from at least
one but not all operators.
If this is delivered, the government will then commit up to
500 million pounds of investment to eliminate total not-spots -
the hard-to-reach areas where there is no coverage from any
operator.
The agreement will bring high-quality 4G coverage to 95% of
Britain by 2025, the government said.
Poor mobile coverage in rural areas has been a problem in
Britain for many years, affecting residents and visitors
including former Prime Minister David Cameron, who has said he
had to cut short holidays in Cornwall, in England's south west,
because of poor communications.
The government has pushed operators to come up with a
solution, including proposing "in-country roaming", where
customers would switch to rival networks if they could not
connect to their own.
Vodafone UK's Chief Technology Officer Scott Petty said the
networks started working on the plan a year ago, before engaging
with government and the regulator Ofcom.
"It will result in great coverage for the country in the
most cost-effective way," he said. "We are sharing our
infrastructure as much as possible, it's great for consumers,
who will have maximum choice wherever they live in the UK."
The allocation of costs had been agreed between the
operators, depending on existing levels of coverage, he said.
The infrastructure sharing plan was far superior to
in-country roaming, which was technically difficult, would drain
users' batteries and hamper competition and investment, he said.
($1 = 0.7780 pounds)
(
Editing by David Goodman, Kirsten Donovan)