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Regions & Cities 2013: Cohesion Policy and Regional Aid

  • Text
  • Enlargement
  • Finland
  • Regions
  • Portugal
  • Artic
  • Hahn
  • Aid
  • Policy
  • Regions
  • Cities
  • Brussels
The 2013 edition of EUobserver's Regions & Cities magazine looks at cohesion spending and successes and failures of EU regional aid.

BRINGING HIGH-spEED

BRINGING HIGH-spEED INTERNET TO THE ‘MIDDLE OF NOwHERE’ An unusual business model has seen super-fast internet brought to a region in Finland where, in some places, there are more bears than people By: Honor Mahony 4 OCTOBER 2013 REGIONS & CITIES

A s Anne-Mari Leppinen tells it, her British colleague simply could not believe that cables allowing high speed access to the internet had been laid in the middle of a forest in remote western Finland. “He asked me: ‘Do you actually have your fibre optic cable in the ditch?’ I replied: ‘Yes’.” A few kilometres later, the man, who was being driven to an IT conference in the area, felt the need for further inquiry: “Is it still there?” “The network is owned by the local municipalities. It is still very unusual to have a municipality acting as an entity, building networks all the way to the final customer in the middle of nowhere,” she said. It is also the first place in Europe to allow service providers to use the network for free. The fibre to the home (FTTH) network paid for the initiative through a combination of a bank loan (guaranteed by the municipalities), some national funding, and a one-time connection fee of €1,500. The population density is three to 10 people per square kilometre [the EU average is 117], so we have more bears than people in some places. Still, we have been able to build connections to farms and households basically in the middle of nowhere,” says Leppinen. She says the move allowing people and businesses to remain in the area. And bringing others back. She mentions a young couple who, hearing about the network, quit their jobs in Tampere, Finland’s third largest city, and set up their bookkeeping business in the region: “All their files are on the cloud, so it is totally dependent on the network.” Next steps are to get all households connected and start pitching the region as a secure and climate-wise logical place for data centres. As for Leppinen herself, she has lived in Helsinki, the US, Singapore and Vietnam. “People still find it very strange that we build the networks in the forest and the woods,” says Leppinen, who is ICT project manager in the Economic Development Agency of the Suupohja Region, and a self-confessed “preacher” about the benefits of open access fibre optic networks. “Now I am back in Kauhajoki,” she says of the small town in Suupohja, “with my 150 megabit symmetrical connection.” It was not always that way. She applied for her current post in 2005 knowing “nothing, literally nothing, about fibre. I thought it was something to eat.” Now, the Suupohja Region, as part of an EU project established last year, is working with 11 different partners from nine member states to brainstorm on the best way to get fibre optic networks to the countryside. “It was a nice surprise to see that everyone wanted to come to us,” says Leppinen of the staff exchanges funded by the programme. She has just seen off two Portuguese and two Slovenian colleagues. She puts it down to the region’s unusual business model. Suupohja Region, Finland Illustration: Wikipedia OCTOBER 2013 REGIONS & CITIES 5

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