National Optical Fibre Network (Digital Bharat Nidhi) Digital Bharat Nidhi (National Optical Fibre Network (NOFN)) is an ambitious initiative to trigger a broadband revolution in rural areas. It was envisaged as an information super-highway through the creation of a robust middle-mile infrastructure for reaching broadband connectivity to Gram Panchayats. It aims to connect all the 2,50,000 Gram panchayats in the country and provide 100 Mbps connectivity to all gram panchayats (GPs). To achieve this, the existing fibres of PSUs (BSNL, Railtel and Power Grid) were utilised and incremental fibre was laid to connect to Gram Panchayats wherever necessary. Dark fibre network thus created was lit by appropriate technology thus creating sufficient bandwidth at the Gram Panchayats. Non-discriminatory access to the NOFN was provided to all the service providers like Telecom Service Providers (TSPs), ISPs, Cable TV operators and Content providers to launch various services in rural areas. The NOFN project was funded by the Digital Bharat Nidhi (earlier termed as Universal Service Obligation Fund (USOF)). Based on NOFN experiences, newer, updated and upgraded version - BharatNet was conceived as a nation-wide broadband network. BharatNet Vision BharatNet is a project of national importance to establish a highly scalable network infrastructure accessible on a non-discriminatory basis, to provide on demand, affordable broadband connectivity of 2 Mbps to 20 Mbps for all households and on demand capacity to all institutions, to realise the vision of Digital India, in partnership with States and the private sector. The entire project is being funded by Universal service Obligation Fund (USOF), which was set up for improving telecom services in rural and remote areas of the country. The objective is to facilitate the delivery of e-governance, e-health, e-education, e-banking, Internet and other services to the rural India. Implementation The project is a Centre-State collaborative project, with the States contributing free Rights of Way for establishing the Optical Fibre Network. The three-phase implementation of the BharatNet project is as follows The first phase envisages providing one lakh gram panchayats with broadband connectivity by laying underground optic fibre cable (OFC) lines by Decmeber 2017. The second phase aimed to provide connectivity to all 2,50,500 gram panchayats in the country using an optimal mix of underground fiber, fiber over power lines, radio and satellite media. It is to be completed by March 2019. For success in phase-2, which will also involve laying of OFC over electricity poles, the participation of states will be important. This is a new element of the BharatNet strategy as the mode of connectivity by aerial OFC has several advantages, including lower cost, speedier implementation, easy maintenance and utilization of existing power line infrastructure. The last mile connectivity to citizens was proposed to be provided creating Wi-Fi hotspots in gram panchayats In the third phase from 2019 to 2023, state-of-the-art, future-proof network, including fiber between districts and blocks, with ring topology to provide redundancy is to be created. The scope of BharatNet has now been extended to reach all villages in the country in accordance with the announcement made by the Hon’ble Prime Minister on 15th August 2020. On 30.06.2021, Government accorded approval for a revised strategy for implementation of BharatNet through Public-Private Partnership (PPP) model in 16 States of the country covering about 3.61 lakh villages (including 1.37 lakh GPs). As on 30.09.2025, the status of implementation of BharatNet is as under:- Number of GPs Connected on OFC & Satellite : 214797 (209,763+5034) Covered Villages - 2,02,540 Wi-Fi Installed in GPs - 104,574 Wi-Fi Active in GPs - 766 Utility (Wi-Fi/FTTH) Data Consumption (Sept.-2025): 1,64,704.00 (TB) Bandwidth: 3,92,141 (Mbps) National Broadband Mission 2.0: Targets for 2030 The National Broadband Mission (NBM) 2.0, launched on 1 April 2025, has set seven key targets for 2030: OFC connectivity with 95 per cent uptime has been achieved in 42,000 villages as of December 2025, with a target of 2.7 lakh villages by 2030. Broadband connectivity to anchor institutions such as schools, anganwadis and panchayat offices has reached 68.8 per cent, with a target of 90 per cent by 2030. The national average fixed broadband download speed stands at 61.55 Mbps, with a target of 100 Mbps by 2030. The average Right of Way (ROW) application disposal time has been reduced from 455 days to 30.4 days, achieving the 2030 target ahead of schedule. Fibre mapping across government PSUs has reached 94 per cent under PM GatiShakti, NMP Platform with a target of 100 per cent by March. Rural internet subscribers per 100 population stand at 47.16, with a target of 60 by 2030. Use of sustainable energy in mobile towers is currently 12.38 per cent, with a target of 30 per cent by 2030. Related resources Detailed optical fiber connectivity plan pertaining to various blocks and GPs List of Gram Panchayats across various districts of India List of active Gram Panchayats connected live on the Network and their GIS VIEW Source : Bharat BroadBand Network Limited