By Sam Tabahriti

LONDON, March 25 (Reuters) – Openreach has expanded its partnership with Google Cloud to ‌use artificial intelligence to speed up fibre ‌broadband construction and cut emissions from one of Britain’s largest ​commercial vehicle fleets, the BT-owned network operator said on Wednesday.

Openreach, which runs the country’s biggest broadband network, said the partnership, first reported by Reuters, uses Alphabet-owned ‌Google’s data tools ⁠to analyse routes, idling and fault patterns across its 24,000-van fleet, which covers almost ⁠200 million miles (322 million km) a year.

“By applying Google Cloud’s technologies to real operational challenges, we’re seeing ​practical, ​measurable benefits,” James Tappenden, ​a managing director at ‌Openreach, said.

The company said the system was already reducing unnecessary travel, cutting fuel use and supporting a faster shift to electric vehicles – a move it said that had removed around 10,000 tonnes of CO2 ‌equivalent annually.

The network builder said ​it was also using Google’s ​AI models to ​map 35 million homes and national ‌transport corridors, allowing planners to ​identify where ​full-fibre lines can be installed more quickly.

Openreach is investing 15 billion pounds ($20.1 billion) to roll out ​its fibre ‌network to 25 million premises by the ​end of 2026.

($1 = 0.7459 pounds)

(Reporting by Sam Tabahriti; ​Editing by Alex Richardson)