Super-fast new Australia-Los Angeles cable to be built

Renai LeMay
12 March 2010, 12:35 PM


A group of high-flying Kiwi businessmen have formed a new venture to build an undersea fibre-optic cable to connect Australia, New Zealand the United States.


The group includes The Warehouse founder Stephen Tindal, TradeMe founder Sam Morgan and Xero CEO Rod Drury, as well as former Vodafone marketing chief Mark Rushworth, telco veteran John Humphrey and entrepreneur Lance Wiggs.

According to a statement issued today, the group, which has dubbed itself Pacific Fibre and has set up a website and associated Twitter account, is planning to construct a 5.12 Terabits per second, 1300km cable to be ready in 2013, connecting the three countries. That capacity, it said, would be five times the level of the existing Southern Cross cable.

The cable would also have the potential to branch out to reach several Pacific islands.

“We desperately need a cable that is not purely based on profit maximisation, but on delivering unconstrained international bandwidth to everybody, and so we’ve decided to see whether we can do it ourselves,” said Morgan.

Tindal said such internet infrastructure was “necessary and basic” and would help decrease the distance between New Zealand and the international markets. “Doing so will be incredibly valuable for New Zealand and Australian businesses and consumers,” he said.

“This is a bold vision which, as realists, we know will not be easy to deliver, it will take a huge effort to complete, and has many risks. While we have completed early feasibility work it is essential for people to know we now need to determine the level of interest from potential partners before we go to the next stage of a full business case, risk assessment and proof of concept to take to investors and bankers.”

“We realise the risks are large but are prepared to push through to the next stage. We have released this news today primarily to ensure that any parties who are interested in this space have an opportunity to speak with us during this early planning phase.”

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Michael J (User):

I hope this will help with the latency between Australia and America. I do a lot of gaming and there often aren't many Australian servers so I have to play on American servers which usually have about 300-400 ping. as many of you might know, that isn't a very playable ping when you're playing a fps

12 March 2010, 1:35 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

apt.pupil (User):

Quoting Michael J:
that isn't a very playable ping when you're playing a fps



FPS aint the only genre its unplayable on...


12 March 2010, 5:56 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Michael J (User):

Quoting apt.pupil:
FPS aint the only genre its unplayable on...


FPS is the only genre I play :)

13 March 2010, 12:22 AM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Tin (Regular user):

"The group includes The Warehouse founder Stephen Tindal"
“We desperately need a cable that is not purely based on profit maximisation"

If "The Warehouse" is the type of shop I'm thinking of, then I'm having visions of a cheapo, no frills fibre cable with Asian labels where we expect English, and a very short life span before it fades, cracks or falls to pieces.

Good luck to them anyway. We all want more competition in Australian internet, and these guys are getting in around the time the FTTP network will start wanting more bandwidth.

12 March 2010, 8:36 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

rogue316 (Advanced member):

Good on them. I hope it all works out.

13 March 2010, 6:54 AM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

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