Optical Delusion? Fiber Booms Again, Despite Bust
After years of licking its wounds, and with much of the fiber-optic cable capacity in the ground still unused, the telecom industry is going on another building spree. Some 19 million miles of optical fiber were installed in the U.S. last year, the most since the boom year of 2000, research firm CRU Group says.
Corning, a leading maker of fiber, sold record volumes last year and is telling new customers that it can't guarantee their orders will be filled. RWF Bron, a Canadian maker of the specialized "cable plows" used to bury fiber-optic cable, says the last six months were its busiest in a decade. And railway Norfolk Southern says it is finally seeing interest in the empty plastic pipes it buried along its tracks in the late 1990s, betting telecom companies would pay to string fiber through them. It is early days in what some in the fiber-optic business are calling a new boom for their long-beaten-down industry. Demand is being driven by skyrocketing Internet video traffic, requests from the financial sector for ever-faster trading connections, and soaring mobile phone use -- which has to be tied into landline networks. Even the 2009 economic stimulus plan, which set aside $7.2 billion for telecom projects, is pitching in. But already some skeptics caution whether enough demand exists to warrant more building.
Optical Delusion? Fiber Booms Again, Despite Bust