Japan Sets New Global Internet Speed Record At 1.02 Petabits Per Second.
Japanese researchers have achieved a monumental breakthrough, shattering the world record for internet speed with a staggering 1.02 petabits per second, a rate so fast it could theoretically download the entire Netflix library in under a second. This remarkable feat, announced on 29 May 2025 by the National Institute of Information and Communications Technology (NICT) in collaboration with Sumitomo Electric Industries, marks a significant leap forward in optical fibre communication technology.
The record-breaking speed was achieved using an innovative 19-core optical fibre, which transmitted data over an impressive distance of 1,808 kilometres—roughly equivalent to the distance from London to Rome. To put this achievement into perspective, 1.02 petabits per second equates to 1,020,000 gigabits or approximately 125 terabytes of data per second. According to estimates, Netflix’s entire catalogue, comprising around 18,000 titles and roughly 123 terabytes of data, could be transferred in the blink of an eye.
Unlike traditional single-core optical fibres, which function like a single-lane road, the 19-core fibre operates as a 19-lane superhighway, allowing vast amounts of data to flow simultaneously without interference. Each core transmits data independently, and the fibre’s standard 0.125mm diameter ensures compatibility with existing infrastructure, making future deployment more feasible. The team also employed advanced amplification systems and multi-input multi-output (MIMO) digital signal processing to maintain signal strength over long distances, achieving a capacity-distance product of 1.86 exabits per second-kilometre—the highest ever recorded for standard-sized fibres.
This breakthrough, presented at the 48th Optical Fiber Communication Conference (OFC 2025) in San Francisco, is not just about speed but also about scalability and sustainability. As global data demands soar—driven by artificial intelligence, 6G networks, virtual reality, and the Internet of Things—this technology could revolutionise internet infrastructure. It promises to support applications such as real-time VR, ultra-fast cloud computing, and seamless global communications, while reducing the need for extensive infrastructure overhauls.
While consumer access to petabit-speed internet remains a distant prospect, the implications for industries are profound. Telecom giants, data centre operators, and governments are already eyeing this technology as a blueprint for next-generation networks, including undersea cables and national broadband systems. The ability to transmit massive datasets over intercontinental distances could enhance AI training, reduce latency for global communications, and even contribute to greener data centres by improving efficiency.
Previous attempts at petabit-level speeds were limited to shorter distances, such as NICT’s 1.7 petabits per second over 63.5 kilometres in 2023. This latest achievement, however, demonstrates that ultra-high-speed data transfer is viable over real-world distances, bringing the vision of a hyper-connected future closer to reality.
The success has sparked excitement worldwide, with experts hailing it as a pivotal moment in telecommunications. As researchers refine amplification and signal processing techniques, the path to practical deployment becomes clearer, promising a future where buffering and slow downloads are relics of the past. For now, Japan’s record stands as a testament to human ingenuity and a glimpse into the boundless possibilities of tomorrow’s internet.

