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Hong Kong, Singapore and Taiwan are Top Data Center Locations in Asia Pacific: IDC

By Vincent Wang
Published: Mar 06,2014

TAIPEI, Taiwan — Hong Kong is the number one location in Asia Pacific when it comes to suitability for setting up new and outsourced data centers. This is followed by Singapore and Taiwan according to technology research firm International Data Corporation (IDC). Google unveiled its data center in Changhua in December 2013 that can be viewed as a milestone for Taiwan.

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According to the recent Asia Pacific (excluding Japan) Data Center Index study published by IDC, the factors which put these countries in different spots are the energy costs and bandwidth availability.

“Choosing a strategically correct location has become increasingly important for organizations to serve their customers across countries. Hence, the scrutinizing process has to be done very thoroughly and carefully,” says Simon Piff, Associate Vice President of Infrastructure Research, IDC Asia Pacific.

He indicates that most countries in Asia are lucrative markets to set up and grow businesses, barring a few which have political and technological environments as deterrent factors.

The IDC Asia Pacific Datacenter Index was created due to ongoing interest in locating datacenters into the Asian market.

This IDC update evaluates the 13 countries in Asia Pacific (excluding Japan) or APeJ to rank them for their suitability for setting up and outsourcing to the datacenters existent in those countries.

IDC completed a political, economic, social, technological, legal, and environmental (PESTLE) analysis for each country and considered factors that contribute to operational costs for running the datacenter business. A total of 18 factors were considered for evaluation of all the countries.

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