BEIJING, March 20 -- China Unicom,
Taiwan's Chunghwa Telecom and Japan's KDDI Corp are reportedly planning to spend
500 million U.S. dollars to build a new submarine communications cable in the
Asia-Pacific region.
The Commercial Times, citing unnamed Chunghwa Telecom
sources, reported yesterday that the three companies were in talks with
Singapore Telecommunications and its local rival Starhub to lay the Asia-Pacific
Cable Network 3 (APCN3).
The Taiwan newspaper said once the Singapore partner
was selected, the four companies would sign a memorandum of understanding on the
project as early as next month.
The 1,000-km undersea cable, which stretches from
Singapore to Japan through Taiwan is likely to be completed by 2013, according
to the newspaper. It said the APCN3 would have a larger capacity than the
10-year-old APCN2, which breaks down frequently.
Yi Difei, a China Unicom spokesman, however refuted
the report. "The discussions have been preliminary and there has been no plan
yet," he said.
Carrying Internet traffic and long-distance calls,
undersea cables are one of the major channels for international
telecommunications. But its vulnerability to natural disasters have worried
telecom operators greatly.
In 2006, an earthquake cut several submarine cables
near the southern coast off Taiwan, shutting down or slowing the Chinese
mainland's access to overseas websites and international calls. It took China
Telecom and China Netcom, which was acquired by China Unicom last year, nearly
30 days to repair the network.
(Source: China Daily)