"We filed an application (for national long distance or NLD) licence this summer and we hope that we will get the licence before the end of the year," NTT President and Chief Executive Tetsuya Shoji told reporters here.
He said the main intent behind the NLD application is to connect the company's nine data centres in India and also to serve businesses, starting with the hundreds of Japanese firms present in the country.
Shoji said after the NLD, the company would also be keen on applying to start international long distance (ILD) services but cited the tardy legal framework and getting security clearances as key challenges for doing so.
He, however, did not give a timeline for starting this venture.
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Using the Rs 700-crore invested in the Mumbai facility as the benchmark, he hinted that the new centres will require an investment of around Rs 2,000 crore and added that parent NTT is keen to support expansion initiatives.
Funds for the data centres will be arranged through a combination of equity, debt and internal accruals, Sanghi said, adding NTT's stake in Netmagic has now gone up to 81 per cent.
Netmagic has 1,000 employees and serves clients in e-commerce, banking and finance, pharma and manufacturing sectors through its data centres, he said, adding it has also started to allocate its space to cloud providers.