Trans Ocean Network
About Trans Ocean Network
Trans Ocean Network (often shown as Trans Ocean Network Corp.) is a Panama-based telecommunications provider focused on fiber connectivity, data links, and submarine-cable-adjacent infrastructure. From its Panama City headquarters in Costa del Este, the company markets enterprise fiber Internet (FTTO/FTTH over GPON/Ethernet), MPLS-based data links (L2/L3), carrier-neutral colocation and interconnection in Corozal, Carrier-to-Cloud connectivity, and a 24/7 Network Operations Center (NOC).
⚙️ Facility Highlights
Data Center Footprint:
- Colocation + interconnection center in Corozal (Panama): Trans Ocean Network states it developed a “centro de colocación e interconexión en Corozal” where major international carriers and capacity distributors maintain presence.
- Additional facilities / city list beyond Corozal: Not publicly listed.
Facility Design & Infrastructure:
From the published colocation page, the Corozal interconnection facility includes:
- Carrier-neutral interconnection principle (neutrality enabling carrier-to-carrier interconnect).
- Meet-Me-Room with:
- Remote redundant cooling (A+B) and humidity control
- Redundant rectifiers (A+B) and redundant battery bank (A+B)
- Fire detection and suppression (A+B)
- Fiber Enter Cabinet (FEC) and a Plug & Play cross-connect cabinet
- Rack/cabinet/cage/suite options, power density per rack, and total IT load: Not publicly listed.
Service Portfolio Overview:
- Enterprise Internet over 100% fiber: “Carrier Class” internet; FTTO/FTTH using GPON and Ethernet, explicitly stating no copper/coax infrastructure.
- Data Links (local & international): MPLS network, services over Layer 2 and Layer 3, LAN-to-LAN and multipoint interconnection.
- Cloud Services (Carrier-to-Cloud): direct connectivity to preferred cloud providers (example explicitly mentions Microsoft Azure).
- Colocation + Interconnection: options for colocation plus cross-connect pricing and MMR-based interconnection.
- Network Operations Center: 24/7/365 monitoring by engineers covering networks, data, transmission, Internet, and MPLS.
🔐 Security & Compliance
Infrastructure Resilience:
- Corozal MMR infrastructure includes multiple A+B redundant subsystems (cooling, rectifiers, battery banks, fire detection/suppression).
Physical & Logical Security:
- Facility security and confidentiality are referenced as “strict standards,” but specific controls (guards, CCTV, mantraps, access control system details): Not publicly listed.
Compliance & Standards:
- ISO/SOC/PCI certifications: Not publicly listed on the official pages reviewed.
🌐 Connectivity & Carrier Access
Carrier Neutrality:
- The Corozal interconnection facility is explicitly described as based on neutrality allowing carriers to interconnect.
Network Capabilities:
- MPLS services over L2/L3, LAN-to-LAN and multipoint connectivity.
- Tier-1 upstream connectivity and submarine cable convergence at a “nodo principal” (as described).
- Carrier-to-Cloud direct connectivity (cloud on-ramps).
- Internet ASN: Trans Ocean Network is listed as AS265867 in PeeringDB, with a published NOC contact email.
Connectivity Use Cases:
- Enterprises needing fiber internet and MPLS-based private connectivity within Panama and internationally.
- Carriers and capacity distributors interconnecting in Corozal using MMR and cross-connects.
- Customers requiring cloud on-ramps via Carrier-to-Cloud connectivity.
💼 Who It Serves
- National and international carriers (company states it serves carriers and applies that experience to corporate customers).
- Enterprises seeking carrier-class fiber Internet, MPLS links, interconnection, and 24/7 NOC-backed operations.
