Martin Reilly, Aqua Comms with Adrian Marron, open eir

Aqua Comms chooses open eir to provide fibre data centre link

Trade
Martin Reilly, Aqua Comms with Adrian Marron, open eir

11 August 2016

Wholesale communications services provider open eir has been chosen by Aqua Comms to provide an ultra-high capacity fibre link to connect Aqua Comms’ transatlantic AEConnect cable system to data centres in Dublin.

The  €5 million deal enables Aqua Comms to connect its $300 million, 5,536km transatlantic subsea cable system to Dublin data centres from its Killala cable landing station through this 350km terrestrial fibre connection, providing ultra-high capacity data-centre-to-data-centre connections.

From Dublin, the system links to the existing Aqua Comms Irish Sea Fibre network, CeltixConnect, and on to Wales and major data centres in London. On the US side, the cable landing station connects to major data centres throughout New York and New Jersey.

“We are seeing a surge in bandwidth demands from data centres, cloud networks, financial services companies, carriers and content providers on AEConnect,” said Martin Reilly, vice president of sales, cloud & content, Aqua Comms.

“We needed a flexible and responsive terrestrial wholesale partner that could provide the fibre capacity, reach and security to reliably connect the cable landing station in Killala to our data centre locations in Dublin. As our customer needs expand, we require the ability to scale the network capacity. Open eir’s proposition met our needs and they were able to complete the work ensuring Aqua Comms’ challenging timescales were satisfied.”

Adrian Marron, head of sales & service management, open eir, said: “Dublin is already home to one of the largest clusters of data centres in Europe. Several IT multinationals currently have vast data centres under construction here as an increasing number of US companies view Ireland as a key entry point to access large European markets.

“By partnering with open eir, Aqua Comms’ customers are guaranteed one of most secure and fastest transits from major Dublin-based data centres to New York, London and Europe.”

TechCentral Reporters

Read More:


Back to Top ↑

TechCentral.ie