Google, Asian Companies To Build $300M Trans-Pacific Cable Network

International Business Times

Published Aug 12, 2014 03:45AM ET

Updated Aug 12, 2014 04:30AM ET

Google, Asian Companies To Build $300M Trans-Pacific Cable Network

By Avaneesh Pandey - Google Inc NASDAQ:GOOGL, in collaboration with five Asian telecom companies, will invest $300 million in a trans-Pacific undersea Internet cable network that will connect two coastal locations in Japan with major West Coast cities in the United States, according to media reports published Monday.

Urs Hölzle, Google’s senior vice president of infrastructure, said in a Google Plus post Monday that the company is “investing in FASTER, a new undersea cable...with a design capacity of 60 Tbps (terabits per second),” adding that the cable network will be 10 million times faster than a typical cable modem.

NEC Corporation TYO:6701, a Japanese information technology company that will lay the cable, said in a statement released Monday that a consortium composed of China Mobile International, which is China Mobile Ltd.'s NYSE:CHL international unit; China Telecom Corporation Limited's NYSE:CHA China Telecom Global; Time Dotcom Bhd.'s (MK:TDC) Global Transit; KDDI Corp TYO:9433; and Singapore Telecommunications Limited (SGX:Z74), are the Asian companies investing in the project.

“The FASTER cable system has the largest design capacity ever built on the Trans-Pacific route, which is one of the longest routes in the world,” Woohyong Choi, chairman of the FASTER executive committee of NEC said.

The statement also said that the construction of the cable network will begin immediately and that it would be ready by the second quarter of 2016.

“Along with our previous investments - UNITY in 2008 and SJC (South-East Asia Japan Cable) in 2011, FASTER will make the internet, well, faster and more reliable for our users in Asia,” Hölzle said.