ID :
246243
Wed, 07/04/2012 - 06:09
Auther :
Shortlink :
https://www.oananews.org//node/246243
The shortlink copeid
TIME's Unit Global Transit to Administer Asia Pacific Submarine Cable System
KUALA LUMPUR, July 4 (Bernama) -- TIME dotCom Bhd (TIME) has entered into an
agreement for the construction and maintenance of the Asia Pacific Gateway (APG)
submarine cable system connecting Malaysia to Korea and Japan.
"As part of the group's global bandwidth business strategy, TIME’s wholly
owned subsidiaries and global bandwidth business arms, Global Transit
Communication Sdn Bhd and Global Transit Limited (Global Transit), will be
administering the APG on behalf of the group," it said in a statement Tuesday.
The APG, which is scheduled to be ready in third quarter of 2014, is a
10,000 km international fibre optic cable system that will link Malaysia to
Korea and Japan with seven branches to other Asian countries.
APG is geographically wellspread to bridge international capacity hubs such
as Japan, Hong Kong, Singapore, Taiwan and Korea as well as connecting emerging
markets such as Vietnam and China where demand for capacity is multiplying
yearly.
This effectively makes the APG the most strategic and widespread Asian cable
system, it said.
Global Transit Chief Executive Officer, Saiful Husni said the group's
investment in the APG cable system completes its ASEAN to USA connectivity route
and solidifies the group as a serious global telecommunication bandwidth
provider.
"Combining TIME's Malaysia-wide fibre network, Global Transit's regional
network nodes, ownership in the trans-pacific Unity cable, and now the APG
system, the TIME group has a complete land and sea fibre network footprint to
capture the high-growth bandwidth demand in Asia.
"An advantage is that we have a global network system landing directly into
Malaysia and this lowers our dependencies on Singapore as the main gateway for
Internet traffic.
"We can now channel high volumes of this traffic on our network with the
lowest latency, directly to the US.
"Given that the APG will be the most advanced Intra-Asia cable system
between with landing points in strategic locations, we can be the most
competitive bandwidth provider in the region," he said.
He also said the group will now be able to provide the complete Internet
connectivity route on its own assets from Asia all the way to the United States.
Demand for bandwidth from Indo-China and South East Asia is growing at a
compound annual growth rate of 44 per cent, from around 2,862 Gbps in 2011 to an
expected 24,000 Gbps in five years.
Saiful adds: "We believe we have a good opportunity to grow our business as
APG will provide the group with an initial capacity of approximately 3,400 Gbps
between Malaysia to Japan and Korea.
"The region is currently dependent on cable systems with limited capacity
and upgrade options."
By adopting a 40 giga-bit-per second (Gbps) optical transmission technology,
the total design capacity of APG is at 54.8 Tera-bits per second.
APG is design protected for 100 Gbps technology upgrades to meet dynamic
traffic requirements in the future, giving TIME an opportunity to increase its
capacity allocation as and when the needs arise.
--BERNAMA