Fiber Is ‘Path Forward’ for High-Capacity, Speedy Data: Corning
The optical fiber that Corning supplies is a “critical enabler” for U.S. 5G deployment, and fiber networks “are the path forward to transmitting petabytes of data to people and devices instantly,” said the company in comments posted after hours Friday in docket BIS-2021-0021. The Commerce Department’s Bureau of Industry and Security sought industry comment to help the secretaries of Commerce and Homeland Security prepare a report to the White House by the one-year anniversary of President Joe Biden’s Feb. 24 executive order on supply chain disruptions in the “critical sectors and subsectors” of the information and communications technology “industrial base” (see 2111050041). Wireless networks “are moving from one optical connection per hundreds of thousands or even a million clients to one optical connection for fewer than 100” mobile phones, IoT devices or homes, said Corning. It continues to invest in R&D “at a much higher rate than our peers,” it said. The document is heavily redacted to hide information the company said “is not publicly available, pertaining to Corning’s business or trade secrets.” Also expunged are pages of Corning’s policy recommendations for identifying ICT supply chain risks and fixing the bottlenecks, except for a single sentence in a “workforce needs” section. Hiring, developing and retaining a high-skilled workforce, said Corning, is “paramount to the continued success” of ICT manufacturing. Q3 revenue in Corning’s optical communications business grew 24% year over year to $1.1 billion. It recently expanded its AT&T collaboration to bolster investments in fiber infrastructure, widen the availability of U.S. fiber-to-the-home broadband networks and speed 5G deployment.