India mulls S$15 billion outlay to get rural poor online
[NEW DELHI] India is considering doubling spending on a high-speed Internet grid to connect villages across the country to 700 billion rupees (S$14.6 billion), Communications Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad said.
A committee appointed by the ministry has recommended raising the allocation for the National Optical Fibre Network to enable changes to the project, Mr Prasad said in an interview Friday in New Delhi. Prime Minister Narendra Modi will have to approve the budget increase, according to Mr Prasad.
"It is ambitious," Mr Prasad said. "We laid down one million kilometres of fiber in a time span of 30 years. Now, we propose to lay down 700,000 kilometers in three years."
An increase in the outlay will help Mr Prasad in the rollout of the broadband network that will link 250,000 village clusters to the Internet and is central to Modi's US$18 billion Digital India initiative. The higher spending could potentially expand opportunities for companies - from local optical fibre suppliers such as Sterlite Technologies Ltd and Aksh Optifibre Ltd, to telecommunications gear vendors such as Cisco Systems Inc and Huawei Technologies Co.
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