FiberLight has announced a $150 million investment to expand its fiber-optic network across West Texas, adding approximately 1,000 new route miles and upgrading large portions of its existing backbone. The Dallas-based company said the initiative strengthens its role in meeting surging bandwidth demand from data centers, hyperscalers, and NeoCloud operators establishing large-scale facilities in the region.
The expansion includes significant overbuilds to boost middle-mile capacity for regional and local carriers, as well as public-sector connectivity for institutions such as the Region 16 school district. FiberLight said these projects align with its mission to extend world-class broadband capabilities to underserved communities while reinforcing Texas’ role in the national AI infrastructure race.
Over the past several years, FiberLight has deepened its Texas footprint with multiple large-scale projects, including the Stargate Project, SH-130 corridor expansion, the North Houston Highway Improvement Project (NHHIP), and the Red Oak build-out under Loop 9 Southeast. Its 20,000-mile network and 300,000 near-net buildings position it to support the escalating fiber requirements of AI training clusters, cloud platforms, and hyperscale data centers across the Southwest.
• $150 million expansion adds ~1,000 new route miles in Texas
• Major overbuild across West Texas to meet AI data center and carrier demand
• Middle-mile and institutional broadband projects support regional connectivity
• Builds on prior Texas projects, including SH-130, NHHIP, Red Oak, and Stargate
• FiberLight operates 20,000 route miles nationwide with services in Ethernet, Wavelength, Cloud Connect, and Dark Fiber
“West Texas has been an important proving ground for our team to demonstrate both our company’s ethos in connecting underserved communities as well as our technical capabilities,” said Bill Major, CEO of FiberLight. “Delivering fiber to the area’s Region 16 school district speaks to our mission to enrich communities with world-class broadband capabilities while being instrumental in fulfilling the bigger, shared goal in the AI Race puts us at the epicenter of transformational change.”
🌐 Analysis:
FiberLight’s $150 million network build underscores the growing strategic importance of West Texas as a digital infrastructure hub. With power availability, affordable land, and expanding fiber corridors, the region has emerged as a prime location for AI-driven data centers from operators such as QTS, Meta, and Crusoe. FiberLight’s dense middle-mile connectivity complements long-haul routes from providers like Lumen, Zayo, and Windstream, creating a resilient backbone for hyperscale and sovereign AI infrastructure. The company’s investment also positions it as a regional enabler for AI-driven edge and energy-sector applications that depend on high-capacity fiber interconnects.
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