Broadband  |  2024-08-06

Home Office commits to another massive spend on Emergency Services Network

Source: UK Authority
Curated by: Gert Jan Wolf - Editor-in Chief for The Critical Communications Review

The UK Home Office has agreed on a new contract with BT and EE to continue the development of the Emergency Services Network (ESN).

It has reached a mobile services agreement with the companies, both subsidiaries of BT Group, with a deal valued at up to £1.85 billion and to run for seven years and three months from the expiry of the existing deal with EE at the end of this year. There is also an option for a one-year extension.

The contract award notice also indicates that users of the ESN, which is due to replace the existing Airwave communications network for emergency services, will be expected to have moved onto it by 2029.

This follows a series of delays in the development of the ESN, work on which began in 2015 with an original schedule to be in place by 2020, but was reset in 2018 after a series of technical problems. This has prompted highly critical reports from the National Audit Office and Parliament’s Public Accounts Committee.

The services covered by the contract include ensuring the network coverage and that users can access the radio network with 4G, evolving into 5G Stand Alone, including for air to ground and marine operations up to 12 nautical miles offshore. They will also extend into specific locations including the London Underground.