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BackUK Government to Upgrade WiFi on Main Line Trains with Satellite Technology
UK Government to Upgrade WiFi on Main Line Trains with Satellite Technology
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BBC Business26.05.2026Tech2 dk okuma

UK Government to Upgrade WiFi on Main Line Trains with Satellite Technology

L'essentiel

The UK government plans to upgrade WiFi on over 1,400 main line trains using low-earth satellites, aiming to increase connectivity from 50-60% to at least 90%, though campaign groups highlight that passengers' main concerns remain cost and reliability of rail travel.

Résumé généré par IA

Pourquoi c'est important

The UK government aims to improve rail travel connectivity through a £57m investment in satellite WiFi technology.

Taille de police

The WiFi on hundreds of Britain's main line trains is set to be upgraded under government plans. New technology will be rolled out on more than 1,400 trains across the UK allowing them to connect to low-earth satellites, which ministers say will provide faster and more reliable service than the mobile networks currently powering on-board WiFi. A government source said the upgrade would "rocket boost connectivity on every main line train in Britain over the next few years, tackling both slow speeds and irritating not-spots". Campaign groups welcomed the move but said passengers' main concerns remained the cost and reliability of rail travel. The plans follow a trial of satellite connectivity across operators including LNER, South Western Railway and Great Western Railway, with the technology to be rolled out across nationalised main line services through funding worth £57m. The government hopes it will improve WiFi availability across journeys from between 50-60% to at least 90%, and prove more effective than the current system of relying on 4G and 5G signal provided by local mobile network operators' masts. Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander is expected to make an announcement about the plans this summer. Campaign group Rail Future told the BBC it was "absolutely right that reliability and capacity increase", calling WiFi "not just an add-on or a luxury". Spokesman Bruce Williamson said patchy WiFi was not the "top priority" for passengers - "the key issues remain the cost of travel, overcrowding and reliability". "But anything we can do to attract people onto the railways has got to be a good thing." The Campaign for Better Transport, which advocates for sustainable and accessible travel, said the move would be a "real step change". "It's worth taking a step to recognise how fantastic that is, and it adds a real USP to rail travel," said the campaign's Michael Solomon Williams. He said unreliable internet was not something which had been stopping passengers from travelling via train - rather, the main issues were fares, delays and cancellations. But he said it was not a matter of paying to fix one problem at the expense of another, and said ministers were working to tackle fares and service reliability. Transport Focus, the independent watchdog representing the interests of Britain's public transport passengers, said it welcomed any improvements to tackling internet "blackspots". "Rail passengers have been clear for years that reliable connectivity on trains is no longer a 'nice to have' - it's essential."

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Perspective IA — des possibilités, pas des certitudes

  • Increased passenger satisfaction with rail travel due to improved WiFi

    Probable · Moyen terme

Questions ouvertes

  • Exact timeline for full rollout
  • Detailed cost breakdown

Sujets liés

This article was originally published by BBC Business.

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