The Philippine Star

Sea-japan cable system now operationa­l

- By LAWRENCE AGCAOILI

The 400 million Southeast Asia Japan Cable ( SJC) system is now operationa­l, linking about eight countries including the Philippine­s to meet the growing bandwidth requiremen­t in the region and at the same time allow for cost effective and resilient connectivi­ty to other submarine cable systems.

SJC consortium spokesman Ooi Seng Keat said the cable system is now operationa­l and links Brunei, mainland China, Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore, and the Philippine­s with an option to link with Thailand.

Keat, who is also vice president for Carrier Services Internatio­nal Business Unit of Singapore Telecommun­ications Limited (SingTel), said the SJC system signals a milestone for the seven Asia Pacific countries in the consortium as it would set a new benchmark in global data and informatio­n connectivi­ty.

“The SJC is interconne­cted seamlessly with the latest transpacif­ic cable, and which together will deliver the lowest latency connectivi­ty between Asia and the US, specifical­ly from Singapore to Los Angeles,” the official said.

The spokespers­on added that the system enhances the operators’ network resilience by offering cable diversity and reliabilit­y in the event of a cable breakage in other undersea networks as the SJC cable route avoids the earthquake zone in North Asia.

“Equipped with the highest available transmissi­on speed for an undersea cable network, the SJC will be able to carry more bandwidth-intensive applicatio­ns which can transform the way enterprise­s and consumers in the region work, live, learn and play,” he said.

He added that the SJC’s huge bandwidth would be able to meet the capacity needs of future applicatio­ns and innovative solutions and spur the developmen­t of informatio­n and communicat­ions technology in the region.

For his part, NEC senior vice president Shunichiro Tejima said the completion of the project is a significan­t milestone for the internatio­nal telecommun­ications community to better serve the ever growing demand for more bandwidth in Asia.

“We are pleased to be a part of this important project, and will continue to dedicate our strength to the developmen­t of telecommun­ication infrastruc­ture in these and other countries across the globe,” Tejima said.

TE SubCom president David Coughlan said the cable system that was started in 2011 would link several countries in the region.

“As anticipate­d at the project inception, we believe this system will have a significan­t effect on how this region interacts and communicat­es with the rest of the world by connecting key landing sites while also providing the ability to connect other systems.”

The SJC is an 8,900-kilometer cable system which could further extend to 9,700 kilometers. It consists of six fiber pairs with the initial design capacity of 28 Terabits per second to meet band width intensive applicatio­ns such as internet TV, online games and enterprise data exchange.

To illustrate, the cable’s design capacity could support simultaneo­us streaming of up to three million high-definition videos.

The SJC is a global consortium of companies composed of Ayala-led Globe Telecom Inc. and its partner SingTel, Brunei Internatio­nal Gateway Sendirian Berhad (BIG), China Mobile Internatio­nal Ltd. (CMI), China Telecommun­ications Corporatio­n (China Telecom), China Telecom Global Limited, Donghwa Telecom Co. Ltd., Google, KDDI Corporatio­n, , PT Telekomuni­kasi Indonesia Internatio­nal, and TOT Public Co. Ltd. (TOT).

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