OREANDA-NEWS. NTT Communications today announced the opening of its Tier IV readyFDC2 - the second phase of its Hong Kong Financial Data Center. FDC2 marks the completion of the HKD 4 billion purpose-built data center complex offering a total of 7000+ racks, which is currently the city's largest in capacity. Designed to help increasingly data-centric enterprises accelerate digital transformation, FDC2's state-of-the-art, energy-efficient and high-density design not only reduces the Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) for its customers, but also delivers high visibility to the enhanced level of data center service commitment.

"Hong Kong is at the crossroads of China's 'One Belt, One Road' development initiative where the city's trade with Asian and European countries along the trade corridor has reached USD 670 billion in 2014, accounting for 66 per cent of the city's total trade. However many local, Mainland China and global enterprises have yet to truly transform to a digital enterprise with a future-poof data center strategy to cope with the rampant growth of mobility, IoT, cloud and big data. The establishment of FDC2 is set to address the acute demand of enterprises' digital transformation as they capitalize global business opportunities," said Mr. Tetsuya Shoji, President & CEO, NTT Communications Corporation.

"Data centers are part of the key infrastructure for a knowledge-based economy, playing a pivotal role in the development of our information and communications technology sector. Although land is a scarce resource in Hong Kong, we have made every effort in the past few years to make available suitable land for data center development, from greenfield sites to conversion of existing industrial buildings. The Government will continue to explore different means to make available more suitable land for data center use in Hong Kong such as through development of caverns," said Mr. Nicholas Yang, the Secretary for Innovation and Technology, HKSAR Government.

"In this digital age when everything goes online, the role of data centers has never been more important. Not only are they the essential infrastructure supporting our pillar industries such as trading and finance, but also the catalyst for the development of new industries and applications that add impetus to our economy", said Mrs Fanny Law, Chairperson of Hong Kong Science and Technology Parks Corporation (HKSTP). "We at HKSTP are devoted to staying connected with the industry to foster collaboration and catalyse growth. I congratulate NTT Communications for its foresight in launching this new data center which will benefit both the industry and the society in this era of digital transformation", added Mrs Law.

High Power Density and Energy Efficient Cooling Technologies Reduce TCO

Land scarcity and high rents in ICT hubs like Hong Kong, Tokyo and Singapore drive the need for smarter and more cost-efficient data center strategies, and increasing power density3 provides an answer by optimizing customers' TCO, as more servers can be put on a rack on premises. Yet, failure to maintain stable temperature and humidity levels in ultra-high power density data centers can lead to IT asset failure costs and unplanned downtime for customers.

About NTT Communications Corporation

NTT Communications provides consultancy, architecture, security and cloud services to optimize the information and communications technology (ICT) environments of enterprises. These offerings are backed by the company’s worldwide infrastructure, including the leading global tier-1 IP network, the Arcstar Universal One™ VPN network reaching 196 countries/regions, and 140 secure data centers worldwide. NTT Communications’ solutions leverage the global resources of NTT Group companies including Dimension Data, NTT DOCOMO and NTT DATA.

About NTT Com Asia

NTT Com Asia is NTT Communication' East Asia headquarters covering Hong Kong, Macao, Taiwan and Korea. The company provides enterprise-class network, data centre, cloud, hosting, e-Commerce solutions, and managed services, and operates its’ wholly owned subsidiary HKNet in Hong Kong.