Communications Minister Clare Curran says the Hawaiki Trans-pacific cable system should be up and running by mid-year,improving and enhancing New Zealand’s international connectivity. “International connectivity is so important to our digital future. This cable will provide significantly more capacity for international data traffic, ensuring our growing domestic demands for data are supported,” says Curran, in a statement. “For Kiwis it means faster, better internet, particularly when content is being streamed from overseas. And it gives New Zealand businesses and researchers who rely on having connections with the rest of the world free reign to pursue new opportunities. “It will also increase competition in our international cable market, as New Zealand’s first and only carrier-neutral cable.” It joins New Zealand’s two other cable systems – Southern Cross and Tasman Global Access – in carrying the majority of internet traffic to and from New Zealand. “The Hawaiki cable will also improve our resilience in a disaster by giving us an additional physical data link to the rest of the world, a new landing point here and by taking a different under-sea route than our other existing cables,” Ms Curran says. “It will also be a huge benefit to our Pacific neighbours. Spurs off the main cable will go to four Pacific countries giving them access to reliable, fast data for medical and research purposes. “I’d like to congratulate the owners of the Hawaiki cable for reaching this significant milestone, and thank them for this significant investment in New Zealand’s digital future,” says Curran. The Government supported the Hawaiki cable through an initial contribution of $15 million as part of a tenancy contract between REANNZ and Hawaiki. Operations for the New Zealand leg of the Hawaiki Transpacific Cable system will start later this month, with the cable expected to be up and running by June 2018. The Hawaiki Cable is a 15,000 kilometre undersea fibre-optic cable that links New Zealand and Australia to Hawaii and mainland United States. The cable is expected to be the fastest communications link between Australasia and the United States, and provide more than 43 Terabits of new capacity. This is around seven times the current capacity of the Southern Cross cable system. Follow CIO New Zealand on Twitter:@cio_nz Sign up forCIO newsletters for regular updates on CIO news, views and events. Related content opinion Generative AI in enterprises: LLM orchestration holds the key to success In the dynamic landscape of AI, LLMs represent a pivotal breakthrough. Unlike traditional AI, which demands frequent data updates, LLMs possess the ability to learn and adapt in real-time. This mirrors human learning and positions LLMs as essential f By Shail Khiyara Dec 06, 2023 10 mins Generative AI Artificial Intelligence brandpost Sponsored by Freshworks How gen AI is joining the holiday shopping season One year after the launch of ChatGPT, the retail industry is embracing generative AI to deliver a variety of benefits By Elliot Markowitz Dec 06, 2023 4 mins Generative AI brandpost Sponsored by NTT DATA Transform your technology and accelerate business outcomes with NTT DATA’s Technology Solutions By Miriam Murphy, Chief Executive Officer at NTT, Europe Dec 06, 2023 4 mins Digital Transformation brandpost Sponsored by SAP How the cloud and AI will help more companies become future proof In a world where macroeconomic uncertainty has become the new normal, being future-proof is no longer a ‘nice to have’. It’s a must have. By Scott Russell, Customer Success at SAP Dec 06, 2023 4 mins IT Leadership Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe