Thanks for the reply, that's the sort of information I'm after. I'm going to put this over to our ISP(s) and see what they come back with.
I've read through the RFC guidelines and they do mention explicitly what we want to do:
2.1 Guidelines for Internet Service Providers (ISPs)
.......
To facilitate hierarchical addressing, implemented using Classless
Inter-Domain Routing (CIDR), all other ISPs should request address
space directly from its upstream provider. ISPs only request address
space directly from regional registries if their immediate
requirement, when satisfied with a contiguous block allocation, has a
reasonable probability of being routable on the Internet, and they
meet one or more of the following conditions.
a) the ISP is directly connected to a major routing exchange
(for purposes of this document, a major routing exchange
is defined as a neutral layer 2 exchange point connecting
four or more unrelated ISPs.)
b) the ISP is multi-homed, that is, it has more than one
simultaneous connection to the global Internet and no
connection is favored over the other
Note that addresses issued directly from the IRs (non-provider
based), are the least likely to be routable across the Internet.
.......
There are several statements elsewhere within the RFC indicating that no address space obtained this way is guaranteed to be routable. I don't know how much of this is covering their own ass with regard to smaller ranges.
It does indicate to me though reading through the RFC that /24 should be ok, longer though would be a problem.
I'll see what our ISP(s) say on matter, but they did seem to indicate that they have similar customers doing similar things ok. But I do know that if some of our clients, clients in the States suddenly can't reach us there will be hell to pay.
Thanks for your input.