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AI data centers require 36 times more fiber than designs with standard servers — severe glass shortages push cable lead times out to a full year

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Why This Matters

The surge in AI data center construction is dramatically increasing demand for optical fiber, leading to severe shortages and extended lead times that could impact the deployment of AI infrastructure worldwide. This bottleneck highlights the challenges of scaling AI infrastructure and the importance of resilient supply chains for critical components. Consumers and industry players should be aware of potential delays and rising costs associated with fiber-dependent AI expansion.

Key Takeaways

Major Chinese optical fiber manufacturers have booked orders stretching into early 2027, as AI data center construction drives demand growth that the supply chain cannot match, according to a DigiTimes report. Hengtong and FiberHome told the publication their production lines are running at full capacity, with delivery cycles for some products extending from weeks to months.

The scale of demand from AI infrastructure dwarfs anything the fiber industry could ever have planned for. Data center fiber demand grew roughly 76% year-on-year in 2025, according to CRU data cited by various industry publications, and the segment is projected to account for 30% of total global fiber demand by 2027. In 2024, that figure was below 5%.

All this is because AI training and inference clusters require far denser interconnect fabrics than conventional cloud infrastructure. Rahul Puri, CEO of STL's Optical Networking Business, told Fierce Network in December that AI-focused data centers need approximately 36 times more fiber than traditional CPU server racks.

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Unfortunately, manufacturing optical fiber preforms, the glass rods from which fiber is drawn, is a technically demanding process with high barriers to entry. New preform capacity typically takes 18 to 24 months to build, according to industry sources cited by DigiTimes, which limits near-term supply regardless of how quickly downstream cable production can scale.

Compounding the bottleneck, manufacturers have shifted production from standard G.652D fiber used in telecom networks to higher-margin G.657A fiber suited to AI data centers and drone applications. That reallocation has created secondary shortages in conventional telecom-grade fiber and contributed to broad price increases. Global fiber prices have risen roughly 70% from a 2021 trough of $3.70 to approximately $6.30 per fiber-kilometer.

Companies like Meta are responding by locking in multiyear commitments. It signed a $6 billion supply agreement with manufacturer Corning in January, which also disclosed two additional deals of similar scale with unnamed hyperscalers in its Q1 2026 earnings. Earlier this month, Nvidia invested $300 million in Corning to build three new fiber manufacturing plants in North Carolina and Texas.

North American demand growth is projected at 22% to 25% this year, while supply expansion trails at 12% to 19%, according to Rebio Group estimates. Data Center Dynamics reported that lead times have stretched to 20 weeks for large-volume buyers and up to a year for smaller purchasers.

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Corning plans to expand its Hickory, North Carolina, plant under the Meta deal and will build three additional facilities under the Nvidia agreement. Still, new capacity from those projects isn’t expected to come online until 2027 or later.