|
Wednesday 6th April 2011 |
Text too small? |
Pacific Fibre, the company planning to build a subsea fibre optic cable to boost connectivity between Australia, New Zealand and the United States, has released a tender document without partner Pacnet.
The two teamed up last July when they estimated the project would cost US$400 million.
But Pacific Fibre said today that it was building the cable alone.
"A joint build memorandum of understanding expired earlier this year, freeing us to move ahead more quickly," Pacific Fibre chief executive Mark Rushworth said.
"We have been assuming a solo-build system for several months now and remain on track to finance and deliver the system in 2013. Our proposed design expands capacity for carriers and multi-national businesses, and provides much needed diversity for the region."
Pacific Fibre has released an invitation to tender for a 5.12 Tbit/sec two fibre pair system, which includes new build cable landing stations in each country.
Vendor responses are due in mid-May with contract negotiations expected to commence with a preferred vendor soon after.
Pacific Fibre's directors and investors include Sam Morgan, Stephen Tindall, Rod Drury, David Kirk, Bill Day, Craig Winkler and Peter Thiel.
NZPA
No comments yet
Rua Bioscience Market Update
FSF - Fonterra announces interim leadership changes
April 29th Morning Report
NZK - Blue Endeavour Pilot Farm and Wellboat Update
TRU - FY 31 March 2026 Revenue and Results Guidance Achieved
FBU - Fletcher Building sale of Fletcher Reinforcing and Wire
April 28th Morning Report
RYM - Ryman Healthcare appoints new independent director
ikeGPS 4Q FY26 and Full Year FY26 Performance Update
HGH - Heartland trading update