Asian enterprises demand bandwidth of at least 100 Mbps to the data centre

Survey sponsored by Ciena reveals that disaster recovery and the need to support virtualisation are the most common drivers for network upgrades.

  • Wednesday, 16th March 2016 Posted 8 years ago in by Phil Alsop
To support new data centres across Asia Pacific, network operators are in a race to provide the needed capacity and services to support businesses’ web-scale demands, according to a Ciena-commissioned Asia/Pacific WAN and Communications Survey conducted by International Data Corporation (IDC), a leading provider of global IT research and advice. The survey revealed that more than 70 per cent of data centres across Asia are now served by networks that offer speeds greater than 100Mbps to the enterprises. Connectivity varies by market, with Singapore and Korea boasting the highest proportion of superfast 1Gbps+ data centre to enterprise connections that are ready to support next-generation requirements such as virtualisation and mobility.
 
The findings of this survey illustrate the motivations of CIOs and IT decision makers of Asia-Pacific businesses to invest in their networks during the next year, revealing that increasing productivity and improving business processes are the top reasons.
 
Key Findings:
·       According to the study, Singapore and Korea have the fastest data centre in the region with more than two in five boasting networks with connections faster than 1Gbps to enterprise customers, while in Thailand and China the figure is one in three. This bandwidth is needed to enable next-generation technologies such as virtualisation, cloud, security, business continuity / disaster recovery and mobility.
 
·       Disaster recovery was noted as a top concern and the most commonly cited reason for businesses to increase network investment in the data centre. The emphasis on disaster recovery points to how critical network infrastructure can be to the operations of a business. It is also influenced by new regulations, especially in sensitive sectors such as communications, banking, government and healthcare.
 
·       Data centres in the region are becoming more interconnected and are often used for off-site storage and data back-up, resulting in increasing appetite for data centre interconnect solutions. In the study, data centre providers cited ease of management, scalability and cost as the top three reasons for choosing a data centre interconnect solution.
 
·       As Asian businesses put more data into the cloud, they are beginning to operate multiple clouds. Because of this, more importance is being placed on being able to work across hybrid environments and spreading workloads between data centres.
 
·       According to Ciena, Asia’s enterprises expect on-demand, high quality and real-time access to multimedia content via a multitude of applications across a wide range of devices. All that content lives in the data centre. This explosion of data requires sophisticated technologies designed to provide high speed connectivity, help businesses scale rapidly and are easy to manage. With new Data Centre Interconnect (DCI) solutions businesses can easily connect their data centres regardless of distance, whether they are in the same metro region or across the continent, while gaining operational efficiencies and lowering costs.