Major telecommunications companies signed in Kuala Lumpur last May 25 , 2009, a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) to plan and develop the an international undersea cable system within the Asia Pacific Region.
The proposed Asia Pacific Gateway Cable System will link major economic growth countries in the Asia Pacific region. It is currently planned to link Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam, Hong Kong, the Philippines, Taiwan, China Mainland, Japan and Korea. It will span about 8,000km and will use the latest Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing (DWDM) technologies with a minimum design capacity of 4 Terabit/s. Parties to the Asia Pacific Gateway include Chunghwa Telecom (Taiwan), China Telecom (China Mainland), China Unicom (China Mainland), KT Corporation (Korea), NTT Communications (Japan), PLDT (Philippines), Telekom Malaysia (Malaysia) and VNPT (Vietnam)
The proposed Asia Pacific Gateway will provide additional capacity for growing demand and an alternative, diverse routing within the region such that it will avoid some of the areas most prone to seismic activity, conditions which are hazardous to undersea cables.
It is planned to be ready for service in 2011. “The planning and eventual implementation of the new Asia Pacific Gateway project is timely due to the growing bandwidth demand of PLDT and the other proponents. It is also intended to meet the requirements for cable route diversity, protection, and to provide capacity to replace the retiring cables in the region,” said Alejandro Caeg, PLDT First Vice President, International & Carrier Business Group. The proposed cable system has the potential to provide an alternative route and/or restoration paths to existing cable systems in the region as it is designed to provide a high degree of inter-connectivity with existing and planned high bandwidth systems.
Monday, June 1, 2009
New Asia Pacific Gateway Cable System by 2011
Labels:
Asia Pacific Gateway Cable System,
Chunghwa,
DWDM,
NTT,
PLDT,
Telekom Malaysia,
Unicom,
VNPT
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment