THE Prime Minister will vow to tackle poor rural mobile phone signal on a visit to the south west today.

The exact location of Boris Johnson's visit will not be revealed until his arrival, but he will use it to announce plans to fast-track efforts to solve the issue.

The Conservatives says that currently only 66 per cent of the UK landmass has geographic coverage for customers of all four network operators. This will rise to 95 per cent or more under their plan, Mr Johnson will say.

The party says that, in the first 100 days of a majority Conservative government, it would finalise a £1 billion agreement with mobile phone operators to pool existing phone masts, and build new ones, bringing dramatically improved mobile service to the countryside.

Visiting the south west, Boris Johnson will set out plans for a “Shared Rural Network” which would see new masts built and existing infrastructure shared between the four mobile phone providers – 02, Three, Vodafone and EE. This would ensure 4G service, for all customers, regardless of their provider, across almost all of the UK, virtually eradicating the not-spots that exist in some rural areas – where “No Service” plagues mobile phones, the Conservatives say.

Areas that have coverage from only some of the four providers - partial not-spots - will also be almost entirely eliminated, they say.

The Tories say the agreement would be the first of its kind around the world and would mean consumers will be able to connect to 4G coverage, wherever they live, travel or work - regardless of their network provider. The fund would see additional coverage to 280,000 homes and businesses and 16,000km of roads.

The operators would pay up to £530 million to get rid of partial not-spots.

A Conservative majority government would add a further £500 million to build new infrastructure in rural areas that are not commercially viable, providing near-universal coverage. It would also upgrade the emergency service network in the countryside to open it up for consumers, with no loss of capacity for the emergency services.  

The party says it builds on a raft of commitments to ensure that rural areas are not left behind, including £5 billion to accelerate the rollout of the highest-speed internet across the country – eradicating the digital divide, boosting regional economic growth and improving productivity.

Mr Johnson said: “Mobile phones are revolutionising our day-to-day lives and are crucial for businesses as they compete and grow. We are determined to make sure that no part of the country is left behind when it comes to mobile connections.

“If a Conservative majority Government is elected, in our first 100 days we will fast track agreements for mast sharing between networks, alongside new investment in mobile infrastructure to tackle rural not-spots by 2025 and make poor mobile signal a thing of the past."

The General Election takes place on December 12.

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