Macquarie hyperscale data center opened in Sydney

Macquarie hyperscale data center opened in Sydney

Prime Minister Scott Morrison hails sovereign, secure data centers as critical to Australia’s national security interests underpinning Australia’s digital economy.

Macquarie Data centers and Macquarie Government, part of Macquarie Telecom Group, have hosted Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison to officially open the company’s Intellicenter 3 East hyperscale data center in Sydney.

David Hirst of Macquarie Data Centers and Prime Minister Scott Morrison

As part of the event, the Prime Minister participated in a ‘threat hunt’, a proactive search to detect and isolate advanced cybersecurity threats.

The official opening marked the on-time, on-budget completion of the data center at the Macquarie Park Data Center Campus located in the Sydney North zone.

The project received an initial investment of more than A$85 million and supported over 1,200 construction, engineering, cybersecurity and IT jobs throughout the COVID pandemic.

The facility’s highly compliant design supports federal government, hyperscalers, global multinationals and Australian corporations.

Speaking at the event, the Prime Minister hailed IC3 East as an example of the type of secure, sovereign and compliant infrastructure Australia needs to bolster its cybersecurity posture and accelerate the digital economy.

“This center we are finally opening today – is about the economy, it is about the digital world that is transforming the world, and it is about our security,” he said.

“Increasingly, our economy and our security depend on each other. This campus is about both – a mighty A$200 million data center, Australian owned, Australian operated, one of the most trusted and certified in Australia, with a team of highly trained engineers delivering up to 50 megawatts of data storage capability.

“Our government has set a goal of Australia being a top 10 digital economy by 2030. An essential foundation of such a goal is trust and confidence, trust in the regulatory systems of a country, and confidence it can meet the increasing cyber challenges in our world.

“Espionage, disinformation, cyberattacks, foreign interference and economic coercion – these types of malignant activities are mounting in our world.

“The scale, frequency and sophistication of cyberattacks have increased. In fact, last year in Australia, a cyber-incident was reported every eight minutes.

“One quarter of these attacks targeted either our critical infrastructure or essential services. The fact is, the security of our critical digital infrastructure goes hand-in-hand with our national resilience. As we do more business online – and hold more information online – ensuring the protection of our data and our networks is more critical than ever.

“We’re fortunate to have partners like Macquarie with whom we manage this risk and entrust parts of our data and cybersecurity.”

The official opening follows Macquarie’s billing commencement earlier this month of a multi-million-dollar contract with a leading global corporation for circa 10 megawatts (MW) of data center capacity.

The deal led Macquarie to increase its planned opening capacity for IC3 East. It also preceded the company unveiling plans to build another data center – its largest ever facility – at the Macquarie Park Data Center Campus. IC3 Super West will increase the campus’ overall capacity to 50MW.

Macquarie Data centers CEO David Hirst welcomed the Prime Minster and called out the importance of secure cloud and data center infrastructure to power Australia’s digital economy.

“We’re privileged to have the Prime Minister here today. It epitomises the importance of secure, sovereign global scale data centers – the very foundation on which the Australian digital economy is built,” he said.

“The government has consistently underscored the importance of cybersecurity and data sovereignty, including through the Cybersecurity Strategy; decision for all government data to be stored in onshore Certified Strategic or Certified Assured data centers; and the Critical Infrastructure Bill, which formally recognized key data storage, telecommunications and processing industries as Australian critical infrastructure.

“We’re proud to support that vision by embedding security and sovereignty into the design and operation of our Data Center Campuses across Sydney and Canberra.”

IC3 East is built to the latest physical and cybersecurity standards essential to securely store and protect data in Australia. This includes federal government-level SCEC Zone 3 or higher security, ISO 27001 and SOC 2.

It is staffed 24x7x365 by government-cleared engineers and incorporates ISO 45001 (occupational health and safety management) and ISO 14001 (environmental management) to meet modern business requirements.

Macquarie Government Managing Director Aidan Tudehope added that IC3 East has the capability, capacity and scale to support Australian government organizations as they encounter increased cyberthreats.

“The world has changed quite dramatically in recent years and particularly in recent months. This has had a direct impact on the level of cybercriminal activity which is landing on Australian shores,” he said.

“We’re proud to see the Prime Minister take such a personal interest in what we know to be one of the most important issues facing the nation. Macquarie is privileged to partner with more than 42% of federal government agencies and personnel, protecting them against cyberthreats through our secure, sovereign Data Center Campuses in Sydney and Canberra.”

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