Info Image

Snam, Cisco Join Forces to Introduce a Multi-Service Optical Network

Snam, Cisco Join Forces to Introduce a Multi-Service Optical Network Image Credit: kenny001/Bigstockphoto.com

Snam and Cisco announced the next step in their collaboration, which started in 2010. 

The two companies are working together to deliver a new multi-service optical network, to be implemented by 2024. This new network will more quickly and effectively connect the control and monitoring points of the national gas distribution infrastructure. Data collected via the network will be used to remotely manage the infrastructure and to provide, through algorithms, advanced services such as the predictive maintenance of plants.

The new-generation optical network will be built with Cisco's Routed Optical Networking (RON) technology with a bandwidth capacity of 400 Gigabits/second. This is forty times more than the current network capacity which is based on legacy non-coherent Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing (DWDM) technology.

Benefits of Routed Optical Networking

The performance of this new multi-service network is comparable to the performance of networks operated by large telecommunications providers. It offers a single infrastructure and will support Snam in several ways:

 - Securely transport and make available the data necessary to remotely control the gas transportation backbone infrastructure (approximately 12,000 km of main gas pipelines and 1,630 control points scattered throughout Italy).

 - Collect data from the Internet of Things (IoT) devices and sensors and transmit them into the monitoring and management systems.

 - Strengthen the proprietary communication network that Snam uses for its business activities, connecting about one hundred locations across the country.

 - Data will be delivered securely to Snam's two data centers, its headquarters and the Cloud. From a cybersecurity perspective, the solution allows critical information to be transported over the network in a unidirectional way, only to the equipment and nodes that actually need to receive it.

The new network has the potential to expand to include additional services in the future for Snam and its strategic partners. From a cybersecurity perspective, the solution allows critical information to be transported over the network in a unidirectional way, only to the equipment and nodes that need to receive it.

A Network that Consumes Less energy and Is Ready for the Future of the Industry

An infrastructure as large and complex as Snam's is made up of numerous data transport and routing devices. With Cisco's Routed Optical Networking, the larger optical platform is now contained in a small form factor optic, dramatically reduced in size and power, and can now be put directly into a router port. This simplifies the entire network architecture, reduces the number of devices to be powered and as a result significantly reduces energy consumption per gigabyte of data transported.

NEW REPORT:
Next-Gen DPI for ZTNA: Advanced Traffic Detection for Real-Time Identity and Context Awareness
Author

Ray is a news editor at The Fast Mode, bringing with him more than 10 years of experience in the wireless industry.

For tips and feedback, email Ray at ray.sharma(at)thefastmode.com, or reach him on LinkedIn @raysharma10, Facebook @1RaySharma

PREVIOUS POST

A1 Telekom Austria Partners with Amdocs to Modernize its Digital Business Systems in Bulgaria

NEXT POST

Adtran Enhances ALM with Comprehensive PON Assurance for FTTX Network Monitoring