Google and Facebook to Build 12000 Kilometers Asian Apricot Subsea Cable System - Wire & Cable India
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Google and Facebook to Build 12000 Kilometers Asian Apricot Subsea Cable System

The submarine cable system will connect Singapore, Japan, Guam, the Philippines, Taiwan, and Indonesia and is aiming for a rollout in 2024.

August 16, 2021

Apricot subsea cable
Subsea Cable

Google and Facebook are joining forces to set up a new subsea cable system meant to boost the internet capacity and speeds of the Asia-Pacific region.

The Apricot subsea cable will span around 12,000 km, connecting Japan, Guam, the Philippines, Taiwan, and Indonesia. It will have an initial design capacity of 190Tbps and is set to be completed by 2024.

As reported in a leading daily — This is not the first time that Facebook and Google have collaborated on a major submarine cable project. Back in March, the two tech giants joined forces in announcing the Echo cable, a network set to connect the US to Singapore, Indonesia, and the Philippines via Guam. Echo will be ready for service in 2023.

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Combined, Echo and Apricot will provide a major connectivity boost to the region, as well as providing Google Cloud with an excellent springboard from which to launch services in Asia.

Google has currently invested in 18 submarine cable systems around the world, including Curie, between Chile and Los Angeles; Equiano, between Portugal and South Africa; and Grace Hopper, a cable connecting New York to London, UK and Bilbao, Spain. In total, the company is invested

In their announcement, Google highlighted an Analysys Mason report exploring the economic impact the company’s submarine infrastructure investment in the APAC had had between 2010 and 2019, showing an aggregated increase of USD 430 billion GDP, as well as generating around 1.1 million additional jobs in the region.

Also Read: LS Cable & System to Secure Largest Submarine Cable Laying Barge.

However, Google’s submarine cable ambitions for the coming years go beyond the APAC region alone, with the company last month announcing the Firmina an open subsea cable project connecting the East Coast of the US to Argentina and other South American locations.

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