The
eight fibre pair ADC system went live in November of last year. Its
design capacity is slightly above 160 Tbps. Consortium members and large
capacity owners include China Telecom, China Unicom, PLDT (the
Philippine incumbent), Singtel, Softbank, TATA, and Vietel. TATA owns a
fibre pair marketed under its own brand, TGN-IA2. NEC built the Asia
Direct Cable.
ADC 100G pricing for the
Singapore to Tokyo route varies from $13.5K to $18.5K MRC on three year
contracts. If you wish to avoid Chinese carriers, yet enjoy competitive
pricing, TATA is a good choice. By a Chinese carrier I mean a network
licensed to operate in mainland China and hence subject to its national
security laws. These laws dictate that Chinese operators must cooperate
with Chinese national security agencies. That's a big problem. In
contrast, as just one example, Apple refused to cooperate with the FBI
on unlocking a phone in an investigation. So there is a clear difference
between China and the West.
Besides
good pricing, ADC has surprisingly good latency. POP to POP the ASE
system clocks a round trip delay of 63.5 ms. ASE is the fastest cable
connecting Singapore and Japan and hence enjoys huge demand from
financial trading firms. A good back up route to ASE is the
corresponding ADC route at 65.4 ms. It's a measured latency so it should
be accurate. However, I have also seen estimates a millisecond higher
at 66.5 ms. Now ADC capacity owners can use their own back haul to Tokyo
so POP-to-POP figures should be expected to vary. Physical diversity is
extremely challenging for Singapore to Tokyo cables because both
Singapore and Japan have far fewer cable landing stations than cables.
ADC lands at Tuas, Singapore whereas ASE lands at the international
airport. However, both land at the Maruyama complex. But there are at
least three fibre routes back to Tokyo so backhaul diversity should be
possible.
ADC's
relatively low latency combined with competitive pricing makes it a
good choice for trading firms looking for a well built and reliable
backup path to ASE. The cable provides connectivity to the following
list of countries: Japan, China, Philippines, Hong Kong, Vietnam,
Thailand, and Singapore. The main trunk links Singapore with Japan. All
other countries are served via branches off the main trunk.

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