POOR mobile coverage in parts of Oxfordshire and elsewhere will be a thing of the past according to an MP.

Witney and West Oxfordshire MP, Robert Courts, who led calls for a Shared Rural Network to extend mobile rural coverage to hard-to-reach areas, says a new deal between government and the phone industry will eliminate poor signal zones.

The new plans for all operators to share phone masts to improve UK coverage is a world first.

It will mean EE, O2, Three and Vodafone will invest £530 million in a network of new and existing phone masts they would all share and which any mobile user can access, and which would be supported by £500 million investment from Government.

The move follows an initiative supported by Mr Courts and 72 cross-party MPs to write to the then secretary of state for digital, culture, media and sport, Jeremy Wright MP, asking him to support a Shared Rural Network which would significantly improve rural coverage and enhance economic, educational and leisure opportunities in rural areas.

Mr Courts said: “This is fantastic news. It will make a huge difference to so many people in West Oxfordshire where, in some areas, there is no mobile coverage at all. It will put an end to the frustration felt by thousands of people who currently feel cut off and mean people will get good 4G signal on the go wherever they live, work or travel and it will have a big impact on the local economy.”

He added: “It will bring 4G coverage to 95 per cent of the UK by 2025 and will go a long way to closing the digital divide that exists across the country in line with the Prime Minister’s pledge to level up the country with world-class digital infrastructure across the country.”

A final agreement between Government and the mobile industry is expected early next year.