시장보고서
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1834106

데이터센터 상호연결 플랫폼 시장 : 구성요소, 기술, 전개 모델, 대역폭, 용도, 최종 이용 산업별 - 세계 예측(2025-2032년)

Data Center Interconnect Platform Market by Component, Technology, Deployment Model, Bandwidth, Application, End User Industry - Global Forecast 2025-2032

발행일: | 리서치사: 360iResearch | 페이지 정보: 영문 195 Pages | 배송안내 : 1-2일 (영업일 기준)

    
    
    




■ 보고서에 따라 최신 정보로 업데이트하여 보내드립니다. 배송일정은 문의해 주시기 바랍니다.

데이터센터 상호연결 플랫폼 시장은 2032년까지 CAGR 10.35%로 237억 6,000만 달러로 성장할 것으로 예측됩니다.

주요 시장 통계
기준 연도 2024년 108억 달러
추정 연도 2025년 118억 4,000만 달러
예측 연도 2032 237억 6,000만 달러
CAGR(%) 10.35%

진화하는 디지털 서비스와 최신 네트워크 설계 옵션을 지원하는 데이터센터 인터커넥트 플랫폼의 중요한 역할에 대한 프레임워크 제공

데이터센터 상호연결(DCI) 플랫폼은 클라우드 서비스, 컨텐츠 전송, 코로케이션, 기업 연결, 고성능 컴퓨팅을 지원하는 고처리량, 저지연 연결을 가능하게 하여 디지털 경제의 중심이 되고 있습니다. 기업 및 서비스 제공업체가 급증하는 트래픽, 진화하는 애플리케이션 수요, 분산된 인프라 풋프린트와의 싸움에서 DCI 솔루션은 용량, 탄력성, 에너지 효율성, 운영 간소화의 균형을 맞춰야 합니다. 이 보고서는 이러한 균형을 형성하는 기술적, 상업적, 지정학적 요인을 통합하여 아키텍처, 벤더 선택, 도입 모델에 대한 의사결정 프레임워크를 제공합니다.

최근 코히어런트 옵틱스, DWDM, IP/MPLS 기반 DCI, OTN 등의 기술 발전으로 설계 선택의 폭이 넓어지면서 소프트웨어 중심의 오케스트레이션과 모듈형 전송 시스템이 강조되고 있습니다. 한편, 클라우드 기반과 온프레미스 도입 패러다임의 상호 작용으로 네트워킹, 컴퓨팅, 스토리지 영역에 걸친 통합적인 계획이 필요한 새로운 하이브리드 운영 모델이 탄생했습니다. 이 소개에서는 대역폭 요구사항, 지연 민감도, 규제 및 거래 역학, 진화하는 운영 모델 등 핵심 촉진요인을 개괄적으로 설명함으로써 독자들이 다음 섹션에서 소개되는 세분화, 지역 역학, 실용적인 권장 사항을 평가할 수 있도록 맥락을 설정합니다. 평가할 수 있도록 준비합니다.

데이터센터 상호연결 아키텍처, 조달 및 운영 전략을 형성하는 혁신적인 변화

DCI를 둘러싼 환경은 상호연결 인프라의 계획, 조달 및 운영 방식을 재정의하는 몇 가지 전환점을 맞이하고 있습니다. 첫째, 코히어런트 광학 및 대용량 DWDM 시스템의 급속한 성숙으로 장거리 및 메트로 전송의 비용 방정식을 재작성하고, 파장의 고밀도 활용과 스펙트럼 효율 향상으로 도달 거리를 연장할 수 있게 되었습니다. 그 결과, 네트워크 설계자들은 파이버 활용 전략과 파장 관리를 재검토하고 기존 스트랜드에서 더 많은 가치를 끌어내기 위해 노력하고 있습니다.

둘째, Software-Defined Control Plane과 Disgregation Trend는 네트워크 팀에게 하드웨어의 라이프사이클과 소프트웨어의 기능 세트를 분리하여 더 빠른 혁신 주기와 유연한 조달을 촉진하고 있습니다. 이러한 변화는 사업자들이 자동화된 프로비저닝, 텔레메트리 기반 운영, 제로 터치 오케스트레이션을 지원하는 상호 운용 가능한 스택을 요구함에 따라, 광 전문업체와 IP/MPLS 벤더 간의 파트너십을 가속화하고 있습니다. 셋째, 클라우드 네이티브 애플리케이션, 실시간 협업, 컨텐츠 전송으로 인해 트래픽 믹스가 변화함에 따라 HPC 및 클라우드 서비스 상호연결을 위한 저지연, 광대역 링크, 컨텐츠 전송 및 기업 연결을 위한 보다 탄력적인 옵션 등 세분화된 대역폭 계층에 대한 수요가 증가하고 있습니다. 등 세분화된 대역폭 계층에 대한 수요가 증가하고 있습니다.

마지막으로, 지정학적, 무역적 발전은 공급망과 조달 전략에 영향을 미쳐 많은 기업들이 공급업체를 다변화하고 지역 공급업체를 육성하여 관세의 영향을 완화하고 리드타임 리스크를 줄이고 있습니다. 이러한 변화의 결과로 업계는 모듈성, 프로그래밍 가능성, 조달의 민첩성을 중시하는 한편, 운영의 안정성과 에너지 효율성에 대한 철저한 집착을 보이고 있습니다.

2025년 미국의 관세 조치가 공급업체들의 전략, 조달, 네트워크 구축 계획에 미치는 누적적 영향

미국이 2025년에 도입한 관세 조치의 변화는 DCI 생태계에 다각적인 영향을 미쳤으며, 조달 계획, 공급업체 라우팅 결정, 핵심 기술 선택, 총소유비용 계산에 영향을 미쳤습니다. 공급업체와 바이어는 공급망 재검토, 다각화 이니셔티브 가속화, 계약 조건 재검토를 통해 이윤을 지키고 납기를 유지하기 위해 신속하게 대응했습니다. 실제로 조달팀은 멀티소싱 전략으로 전환하여 우선순위 공급업체 목록에 지역 제조업체를 추가하고, 관세로 인한 비용 변동에 따른 영향을 줄이기 위해 대체 물류 경로를 확보하는 등 다양한 노력을 기울였습니다.

운영 측면에서는 관세 환경이 랜디드 비용 분석과 전체 라이프사이클 비용의 투명성을 중요시하게 되었습니다. 네트워크 사업자들은 점진적인 업그레이드가 가능한 모듈형 아키텍처를 선호하고, 불확실한 관세 일정에 따라 하드웨어에 대한 대규모 자본 지출을 미룰 수 있도록 했습니다. 많은 경우, 시스템 통합업체와 공급업체는 관세 통과 조항과 보다 유연한 보증 및 서비스 조건을 포함하기 위해 상업적 계약을 재구성했습니다. 동시에, 서비스 제공업체와 기업 구매자들은 클라우드 기반과 온프레미스 도입의 트레이드오프를 재검토하고, 일부 워크로드를 코로케이션 및 클라우드 인터커넥트 서비스로 이전함으로써 성능 SLA를 유지하면서 자본 주도 관세의 영향을 완화할 수 있다는 사실을 깨달았습니다. 인식했습니다.

전략적 관점에서 볼 때, 관세의 영향으로 중요한 광전송 조립 및 테스트 업무의 니어쇼어링과 온쇼어링에 대한 논의가 가속화되었습니다. 다양한 제조 거점을 보유한 벤더는 납기를 원활하게 하기 위해 유리한 위치에 있는 반면, 소규모 공급업체는 규모를 확대하기 위해 전략적 파트너십을 모색하고 있었습니다. 규제 당국과 업계 단체도 불확실성을 줄이기 위해 보다 명확한 분류 지침과 신속한 분쟁 해결 메커니즘을 제시하는 데 적극적으로 나서고 있습니다. 마지막으로, 2025년 관세 조치는 배치 속도를 유지하고 서비스 연속성을 보호하기 위해 공급망 탄력성, 계약 유연성, 조달 고도화가 중요하다는 점을 강조했습니다.

DCI 시장 전반의 기술 채택 패턴, 조달 선택, 사용 사례 우선순위를 파악할 수 있는 주요 세분화 인사이트를 제공합니다.

세분화 분석을 통해 벤더와 구매자 모두 제품 로드맵과 조달 정책의 우선순위를 결정하는 데 도움이 되는 차별화 된 채택 패턴을 확인할 수 있었습니다. 구성요소에 따라 시장은 하드웨어, 서비스, 소프트웨어를 포함하며, 하드웨어는 광전송 장비, 라우터, 스위치로 세분화됩니다. 이 구분은 상호운용성, 전력 효율성, 소형 모듈형 폼팩터에 대한 투자가 가장 큰 가치를 창출할 수 있는 분야를 강조합니다. 아키텍처별로는 코히어런트 옵틱스, DWDM(Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing), IP/MPLS 기반 DCI, OTN(Optical Transport Network) 아키텍처가 있으며, 광 계층의 혁신 가 애플리케이션 레벨의 SLA에 초점을 맞춘 상위 레벨의 패킷 오케스트레이션을 가능하게 하는 계층화된 기술 스택임을 보여주고 있습니다.

목차

제1장 서문

제2장 조사 방법

제3장 주요 요약

제4장 시장 개요

제5장 시장 인사이트

제6장 미국 관세의 누적 영향 2025

제7장 AI의 누적 영향 2025

제8장 데이터센터 상호연결 플랫폼 시장 : 구성요소별

  • 하드웨어
    • 광전송 장비
    • 라우터
    • 스위치
  • 서비스
  • 소프트웨어

제9장 데이터센터 상호연결 플랫폼 시장 : 기술별

  • 코히어런트 광학
  • 고밀도 파장 분할 다중(DWDM)
  • IP/MPLS 기반 DCI
  • 광전송 네트워크(OTN)

제10장 데이터센터 상호연결 플랫폼 시장 : 전개 모델별

  • 클라우드 기반
  • 온프레미스

제11장 데이터센터 상호연결 플랫폼 시장 : 대역폭별

  • 100Gbps
  • 10Gbps
  • 400Gbps

제12장 데이터센터 상호연결 플랫폼 시장 : 용도별

  • 클라우드 서비스 상호연결
  • 코로케이션 서비스
  • 컨텐츠 전송 네트워크
  • 기업 접속
  • 고성능 컴퓨팅

제13장 데이터센터 상호연결 플랫폼 시장 : 최종 이용 업계별

  • BFSI
  • 정부
  • 헬스케어
  • IT·통신
  • 소매

제14장 데이터센터 상호연결 플랫폼 시장 : 지역별

  • 아메리카
    • 북미
    • 라틴아메리카
  • 유럽, 중동 및 아프리카
    • 유럽
    • 중동
    • 아프리카
  • 아시아태평양

제15장 데이터센터 상호연결 플랫폼 시장 : 그룹별

  • ASEAN
  • GCC
  • EU
  • BRICS
  • G7
  • NATO

제16장 데이터센터 상호연결 플랫폼 시장 : 국가별

  • 미국
  • 캐나다
  • 멕시코
  • 브라질
  • 영국
  • 독일
  • 프랑스
  • 러시아
  • 이탈리아
  • 스페인
  • 중국
  • 인도
  • 일본
  • 호주
  • 한국

제17장 경쟁 구도

  • 시장 점유율 분석, 2024
  • FPNV 포지셔닝 매트릭스, 2024
  • 경쟁 분석
    • Cisco Systems, Inc.
    • ZTE Corporation
    • Arista Networks, Inc.
    • Broadcom Inc.
    • Ciena Corporation
    • Corning Incorporated
    • Dell Technologies Inc.
    • Digital Realty Trust, Inc.
    • Equinix, Inc.
    • Extreme Networks, Inc.
    • Fujitsu Limited
    • Hewlett Packard Enterprise Company
    • Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
    • International Business Machines Corporation
    • Juniper Networks, Inc.
    • Lumentum Holdings Inc.
    • Marvell Technology, Inc.
    • Megaport
    • Microsoft Corporation
    • Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Ltd.
    • NEC Corporation
    • Nokia Corporation
    • Oracle Corporation
    • RANOVUS
    • Schneider Electric SE
KSM

The Data Center Interconnect Platform Market is projected to grow by USD 23.76 billion at a CAGR of 10.35% by 2032.

KEY MARKET STATISTICS
Base Year [2024] USD 10.80 billion
Estimated Year [2025] USD 11.84 billion
Forecast Year [2032] USD 23.76 billion
CAGR (%) 10.35%

Framing the critical role of data center interconnect platforms in supporting evolving digital services and modern network design choices

Data center interconnect (DCI) platforms are central to the digital economy, enabling high-throughput, low-latency connections that underpin cloud services, content delivery, colocation, enterprise connectivity, and high performance computing. As enterprises and service providers contend with surging traffic, evolving application demands, and distributed infrastructure footprints, DCI solutions must balance capacity, resilience, energy efficiency, and operational simplicity. This report synthesizes the technical, commercial, and geopolitical forces shaping that balance and frames decisions around architecture, vendor selection, and deployment model.

In recent years, technological progress in coherent optics, DWDM, IP/MPLS-based DCI, and OTN has expanded design options while shifting the emphasis toward software-driven orchestration and modular transport systems. Meanwhile, the interaction between cloud-based and on-premise deployment paradigms has created new hybrid operating models that require integrated planning across networking, compute, and storage domains. This introduction establishes the context for subsequent analysis by outlining core drivers-bandwidth requirements, latency sensitivity, regulatory and trade dynamics, and evolving operational models-and preparing readers to evaluate segmentation, regional dynamics, and actionable recommendations presented in the following sections.

Transformative Shifts Reshaping Data Center Interconnect Architecture, Procurement, and Operational Strategies

The DCI landscape is undergoing several convergent shifts that are redefining how organizations plan, procure, and operate interconnect infrastructure. First, the rapid maturation of coherent optics and high-capacity DWDM systems has rewritten the cost equation for long-haul and metro transport, enabling denser wavelength usage and longer reach with improved spectral efficiency. Consequently, network architects are reconsidering fiber utilization strategies and wavelength management to squeeze more value from existing strands.

Second, software-defined control planes and disaggregation trends are empowering network teams to decouple hardware lifecycle from software feature sets, fostering faster innovation cycles and more flexible procurement. This shift is accelerating partnerships between optical specialists and IP/MPLS vendors as operators seek interoperable stacks that support automated provisioning, telemetry-driven operations, and zero-touch orchestration. Third, changing traffic mixes driven by cloud-native applications, real-time collaboration, and content delivery are prompting demand for granular bandwidth tiers: lower-latency, high-bandwidth links for HPC and cloud services interconnect, and more elastic options for content distribution and enterprise connectivity.

Finally, geopolitical and trade developments are influencing supply chains and sourcing strategies, prompting many organizations to diversify vendors and cultivate regional suppliers to mitigate tariff exposure and reduce lead-time risk. Collectively, these shifts are producing an industry that prizes modularity, programmability, and procurement agility, while retaining a relentless focus on operational reliability and energy efficiency.

Cumulative Impact of United States Tariff Measures Announced in 2025 on Supplier Strategies, Procurement, and Network Deployment Plans

Tariff changes introduced by the United States in 2025 have had a multifaceted impact on the DCI ecosystem, touching procurement planning, vendor routing decisions, and the total cost of ownership calculus without altering core technology choices. Suppliers and buyers responded swiftly by reassessing supply chains, accelerating diversification initiatives, and revising contractual terms to protect margins and maintain delivery schedules. In practice, procurement teams shifted toward multi-sourcing strategies, extending preferred supplier lists to include regional manufacturers and alternative logistics pathways to mitigate exposure to tariff-induced cost volatility.

Operationally, the tariff environment increased emphasis on landed cost analysis and full lifecycle cost transparency. Network operators prioritized modular architectures that allowed incremental upgrades, enabling them to defer large capital outlays on hardware subject to uncertain duty schedules. In many cases, systems integrators and suppliers restructured commercial agreements to include tariff pass-through clauses and more flexible warranty and service terms. Concurrently, service providers and enterprise buyers revisited the trade-offs between cloud-based and on-premise deployments, recognizing that shifting a portion of workloads to colocation or cloud interconnect services could offer relief from capital-led tariff impacts while maintaining performance SLAs.

From a strategic standpoint, the tariffs accelerated conversations about nearshoring and onshoring of critical optical transport assembly and testing activities. Vendors with diversified manufacturing footprints were better positioned to smooth delivery timelines, while smaller suppliers sought strategic partnerships to gain scale. Regulators and industry associations also became more active in advocating for clearer classification guidance and expedited dispute resolution mechanisms to reduce uncertainty. Ultimately, the 2025 tariff measures underscored the importance of supply chain resilience, contractual flexibility, and procurement sophistication in preserving deployment velocity and protecting service continuity.

Key Segmentation Insights That Illuminate Technology Adoption Patterns, Procurement Choices, and Use Case Priorities Across the DCI Market

Segmentation analysis reveals differentiated adoption patterns that should guide both vendors and buyers when prioritizing product roadmaps and procurement policies. Based on Component, the market encompasses Hardware, Services, and Software, with Hardware further delineated into optical transport equipment, routers, and switches; this split highlights where investments in interoperability, power efficiency, and compact modular form factors will deliver the most value. Based on Technology, the market includes coherent optics, dense wavelength division multiplexing (DWDM), IP/MPLS-based DCI, and optical transport network (OTN) architectures, indicating a layered technology stack where optical layer innovations enable higher-level packet orchestration to focus on application-level SLAs.

Based on Deployment Model, the choice between cloud-based and on-premise implementations continues to shape procurement lifecycle and support models, as cloud-based options emphasize operational expenditure and rapid scalability while on-premise deployments prioritize control and predictable performance. Based on Bandwidth, demand clusters around 10Gbps, 100Gbps, and 400Gbps tiers, with each tier aligned to distinct use cases; lower bandwidth links often serve enterprise connectivity and branch aggregation, mid-tier links backhaul colocation and content distribution needs, while higher capacity links support hyperscale cloud interconnect and high performance computing traffic. Based on Application, core demand drivers include cloud services interconnect, colocation services, content delivery networks, enterprise connectivity, and high performance computing, which together define where latency, resiliency, and capacity must be optimized. Based on End User Industry, verticals such as banking, financial services & insurance (BFSI), government, healthcare, IT & telecom, and retail exhibit unique regulatory, security, and performance requirements that influence vendor selection, support expectations, and compliance postures.

Taken together, these segmentation lenses demonstrate that successful DCI strategies require an integrated approach that considers component-level interoperability, technology stack alignment, deployment economics, bandwidth provisioning, application SLAs, and industry-specific constraints. Vendors that align product roadmaps to these combined segmentation vectors and provide clear integration pathways between optical transport and packet layers will be better positioned to meet evolving customer needs.

Regional Dynamics and Considerations That Influence Procurement, Deployment, and Regulatory Compliance Across Global DCI Markets

Geographic dynamics continue to shape strategic choices for data center interconnect deployment, with the Americas, Europe, Middle East & Africa, and Asia-Pacific each presenting distinct regulatory regimes, supplier ecosystems, and demand profiles. In the Americas, demand is frequently led by hyperscale cloud operators and large service providers prioritizing short lead times, high-capacity metro rings, and seamless integration with cloud exchange fabrics. Regulatory frameworks in the region emphasize data protection and cross-border flows, which in turn influence where sensitive workloads are hosted and how interconnect topologies are designed.

Across Europe, the Middle East & Africa, supply chain complexity intersects with stringent privacy regulations and heterogeneous national telecom policies, prompting many operators to prioritize interoperability, vendor support, and localized service capabilities. In Asia-Pacific, accelerated data growth, denser metro clusters, and significant investments in subsea and terrestrial fiber assets have driven appetite for higher-capacity DWDM systems and rapid wavelength provisioning. Each region also presents a distinct vendor landscape and set of logistical considerations that affect lead times, warranty support, and regional engineering talent availability. Consequently, organizations expanding internationally must incorporate regional procurement intelligence, regulatory compliance checks, and contingency planning into their DCI program governance to ensure consistent performance and contractual clarity across jurisdictions.

Key Company-Level Insights on Competitive Differentiation, Partnership Models, and Strategic Priorities Within the DCI Vendor Ecosystem

At the company level, successful vendors differentiate through a mix of technological depth, systems integration capability, and flexible commercial models. Optical specialists that excel in coherent optics and DWDM innovations tend to compete on spectral efficiency, power consumption, and wavelength density, whereas IP-focused suppliers emphasize route control, traffic engineering, and integration with packet orchestration platforms. Meanwhile, systems integrators and managed service providers have carved out roles by bundling hardware, software, and operations services to reduce buyer integration risk and accelerate time-to-service.

Partnerships and alliances are increasingly important as disaggregation and open interfaces proliferate. Vendors that establish robust ecosystems-encompassing third-party transceiver suppliers, software orchestration partners, and regional service partners-are better able to present integrated solutions that meet customer SLAs. Commercially, strategic priorities include offering consumption-based pricing for cloud-like elasticity, long-term service contracts that embed lifecycle support, and transparent supply chain practices that address tariff and lead-time risks. Additionally, companies investing in advanced telemetry, analytics, and automation capabilities enable customers to transition from manual, reactive operations to proactive, intent-driven network management, thereby reducing mean time to repair and improving capacity utilization.

Actionable Recommendations for Industry Leaders to Strengthen Resilience, Optimize Cost Structures, and Accelerate Deployment of DCI Solutions

Executives and technical leaders should prioritize supply chain resilience by diversifying supplier footprints and embedding landed-cost analysis into procurement decisions so that tariff and logistics volatility are evaluated alongside technical fit. In tandem, adopting modular, disaggregated architectures can mitigate upgrade risk and enable incremental capacity scaling, allowing organizations to align capital deployment to demand without sacrificing interoperability. These technical choices should be complemented by rigorous lifecycle management practices, including standardized testing protocols and roll-forward firmware strategies that reduce operational complexity.

Operational teams must also accelerate automation and telemetry adoption to improve provisioning speed and fault isolation. Investing in software-defined control planes and intent-based orchestration reduces manual workflows and shortens service activation cycles. From a commercial perspective, negotiators should seek contract clauses that share tariff risk, provide flexible delivery windows, and secure access to regional spare parts inventories. Finally, organizations should invest in targeted skill development-optical engineering, transport layer automation, and cross-domain systems integration-to ensure internal teams can extract maximum value from advanced DCI platforms and maintain service reliability as top priority.

Research Methodology Detailing Data Collection Approaches, Expert Engagement, and Analytical Techniques Employed to Produce Actionable Market Insights

The research combined primary and secondary investigation to produce a comprehensive view of the DCI landscape. Primary research included structured interviews with network architects, procurement leads, carrier operators, colocation providers, and systems integrators to capture real-world operational constraints, procurement preferences, and adoption timelines. These conversations informed qualitative understanding of deployment trade-offs between cloud-based and on-premise models and clarified how bandwidth tiers and application demands drive technical choices.

Secondary research synthesized published technology white papers, regulatory filings, vendor product specifications, and supply chain reporting to validate technical claims and identify trends in coherent optics, DWDM, IP/MPLS-based DCI, and OTN adoption. Data triangulation techniques were used to reconcile differing perspectives, and scenario analysis provided structured viewpoints on how tariff changes, regional regulatory shifts, and technology maturation could influence procurement behavior. Finally, findings were peer-reviewed by domain experts to ensure accuracy, relevance, and applicability for decision-makers, with documented limitations where public visibility into supplier cost structures and contractual terms was constrained.

Conclusion Summarizing Strategic Takeaways and the Imperative for Integrated Planning Across Technology, Procurement, and Operations

The evolution of data center interconnect platforms is characterized by a shift toward modularity, programmability, and supply chain resilience. Advances in coherent optics and DWDM continue to expand technical options, while disaggregation and software-driven control planes enable faster innovation and more dynamic operations. At the same time, tariff and geopolitical dynamics have reinforced the need for diversified sourcing strategies and commercially flexible agreements that protect delivery schedules and margins.

For decision-makers, the imperative is to align network architecture choices with procurement sophistication and operational automation. By integrating component-level interoperability, technology selection, deployment model economics, bandwidth tiering, and industry-specific compliance requirements into a cohesive program, organizations can achieve reliable, cost-effective, and scalable DCI deployments. In short, success will depend on the ability to combine technical excellence with disciplined procurement and proactive operations management to meet the demands of an increasingly distributed digital economy.

Table of Contents

1. Preface

  • 1.1. Objectives of the Study
  • 1.2. Market Segmentation & Coverage
  • 1.3. Years Considered for the Study
  • 1.4. Currency & Pricing
  • 1.5. Language
  • 1.6. Stakeholders

2. Research Methodology

3. Executive Summary

4. Market Overview

5. Market Insights

  • 5.1. Adoption of coherent optical wavelength division multiplexing for scalable inter-data center capacity builds
  • 5.2. Integration of ai-driven predictive analytics platforms for preemptive maintenance in dci networks
  • 5.3. Advancement of 400g and 800g coherent pluggable transceivers enabling ultra-high bandwidth dci links
  • 5.4. Adoption of disaggregated white-box switching architectures to reduce dci opex and vendor lock-in risks
  • 5.5. Implementation of zero-trust security models with encrypted overlays in multitenant data center interconnect topologies
  • 5.6. Rise of cloud-native network functions virtualization for on-demand provisioning and scaling of dci services
  • 5.7. Proliferation of metro edge micro-dci deployments to support latency-sensitive applications and iot workloads

6. Cumulative Impact of United States Tariffs 2025

7. Cumulative Impact of Artificial Intelligence 2025

8. Data Center Interconnect Platform Market, by Component

  • 8.1. Hardware
    • 8.1.1. Optical Transport Equipment
    • 8.1.2. Routers
    • 8.1.3. Switches
  • 8.2. Services
  • 8.3. Software

9. Data Center Interconnect Platform Market, by Technology

  • 9.1. Coherent Optics
  • 9.2. Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing (DWDM)
  • 9.3. IP/MPLS-based DCI
  • 9.4. Optical Transport Network (OTN)

10. Data Center Interconnect Platform Market, by Deployment Model

  • 10.1. Cloud-Based
  • 10.2. On-Premise

11. Data Center Interconnect Platform Market, by Bandwidth

  • 11.1. 100Gbps
  • 11.2. 10Gbps
  • 11.3. 400Gbps

12. Data Center Interconnect Platform Market, by Application

  • 12.1. Cloud Services Interconnect
  • 12.2. Colocation Services
  • 12.3. Content Delivery Network
  • 12.4. Enterprise Connectivity
  • 12.5. High Performance Computing

13. Data Center Interconnect Platform Market, by End User Industry

  • 13.1. BFSI
  • 13.2. Government
  • 13.3. Healthcare
  • 13.4. IT & Telecom
  • 13.5. Retail

14. Data Center Interconnect Platform Market, by Region

  • 14.1. Americas
    • 14.1.1. North America
    • 14.1.2. Latin America
  • 14.2. Europe, Middle East & Africa
    • 14.2.1. Europe
    • 14.2.2. Middle East
    • 14.2.3. Africa
  • 14.3. Asia-Pacific

15. Data Center Interconnect Platform Market, by Group

  • 15.1. ASEAN
  • 15.2. GCC
  • 15.3. European Union
  • 15.4. BRICS
  • 15.5. G7
  • 15.6. NATO

16. Data Center Interconnect Platform Market, by Country

  • 16.1. United States
  • 16.2. Canada
  • 16.3. Mexico
  • 16.4. Brazil
  • 16.5. United Kingdom
  • 16.6. Germany
  • 16.7. France
  • 16.8. Russia
  • 16.9. Italy
  • 16.10. Spain
  • 16.11. China
  • 16.12. India
  • 16.13. Japan
  • 16.14. Australia
  • 16.15. South Korea

17. Competitive Landscape

  • 17.1. Market Share Analysis, 2024
  • 17.2. FPNV Positioning Matrix, 2024
  • 17.3. Competitive Analysis
    • 17.3.1. Cisco Systems, Inc.
    • 17.3.2. ZTE Corporation
    • 17.3.3. Arista Networks, Inc.
    • 17.3.4. Broadcom Inc.
    • 17.3.5. Ciena Corporation
    • 17.3.6. Corning Incorporated
    • 17.3.7. Dell Technologies Inc.
    • 17.3.8. Digital Realty Trust, Inc.
    • 17.3.9. Equinix, Inc.
    • 17.3.10. Extreme Networks, Inc.
    • 17.3.11. Fujitsu Limited
    • 17.3.12. Hewlett Packard Enterprise Company
    • 17.3.13. Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
    • 17.3.14. International Business Machines Corporation
    • 17.3.15. Juniper Networks, Inc.
    • 17.3.16. Lumentum Holdings Inc.
    • 17.3.17. Marvell Technology, Inc.
    • 17.3.18. Megaport
    • 17.3.19. Microsoft Corporation
    • 17.3.20. Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Ltd.
    • 17.3.21. NEC Corporation
    • 17.3.22. Nokia Corporation
    • 17.3.23. Oracle Corporation
    • 17.3.24. RANOVUS
    • 17.3.25. Schneider Electric SE
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