The second Chile region will be in the Valparaíso Region alongside the existing region in Santiago. Credit: IDG Oracle on Wednesday said it is opening a second cloud region in Chile as part of ongoing efforts to expand its global cloud footprint to compete with the larger rivals including AWS, Microsoft, and Google. The second region will be based in the Valparaíso Region alongside the existing region in Santiago, the company said, adding that the new region will bolster its efforts to address business continuity while complying with data residency and sovereignty regulations. The new region at Valparaíso will offer almost all Oracle services, Oracle Autonomous Database, MySQL HeatWave Database Service, Oracle Container Engine for Kubernetes, Oracle Cloud VMware Solution, and AI infrastructure. The commencement of operations at the second region takes Oracle’s data center count to 48 globally and in South America to five regions, including Sao Paulo and Vinhedo in Brazil, Bogota in Colombia, and the two regions in Chile.In contrast, Google has two cloud regions in South America — Santiago, Chile, and Sao Paulo, Brazil.AWS has a cloud region in Sao Paulo, which has three availability zones. The cloud services provider also has 11 edge locations across South America.Availability zones are the building blocks of an AWS region that place infrastructure independent of each other in separate and distinct geographic locations. On the other hand, AWS edge locations are data centers, which are strategically placed to decrease latency and provide a smaller subset of AWS services. AWS, too, is planning a region in Chile.Microsoft is yet to open a cloud region in Chile but according to its website, it is in the works. It has a cloud region in Sao Paulo, Brazil. IBM, too, has a cloud region in Sao Paulo, Brazil. Earlier in September, Oracle had announced the launch of a second region in Mexico, before launching a second cloud region in Singapore in April and a new region in Serbia in March. Related content brandpost Sponsored by Palo Alto Networks What CIOs need to know about the newly proposed Critical Infrastructure Cyber Incident Reporting Rule The current cybersecurity regulatory landscape continues to evolve, and CIRCIA’s incident reporting requirements are just one of the many emerging regulations organizations will need to observe. By Anand Oswal, Senior Vice President, and GM of Network Security at Palo Alto Networks May 15, 2024 5 mins Security news IT staff shortages damage the bottom line: IDC report According to an IDC survey of IT execs, missed revenue growth, quality declines, and plunges in customer satisfaction are among the key business impacts of understaffed IT orgs. By Evan Schuman May 15, 2024 4 mins Hiring IT Skills IT Training how-to Download our cloud cost management enterprise buyer’s guide From the editors of our sister publication CIO.com, this enterprise buyer’s guide helps IT staff understand the cost management tools available to keep their cloud spend under control. By Peter Wayner May 15, 2024 1 min Budgeting Cloud Management Vendor Management analysis Canadian CIOs discuss driving a successful hybrid cloud roadmap By Lee Rennick, Editor, CIO May 15, 2024 4 mins Events Cloud Computing IT Leadership PODCASTS VIDEOS RESOURCES EVENTS SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe