Southern Cross Cable

Southern Cross Cable
Cable type Fibre-optic
Fate Active
Construction beginning 1998
Construction finished 2000
First traffic 2000
Design capacity >6000 Gbit/s (Jan 2012, based on 40G Technology)
Lit capacity 5.4 Tbit/s (June 2016)[1]
Built by Alcatel-Lucent/Fujitsu
Area served Southern Pacific
Owner(s) Southern Cross Cables Limited (Spark NZ (50.01%), Singtel/Optus (39.99%), Verizon Business (10%))
Website www.southerncrosscables.com
The route of the cables. The blue are submarine; the red are terrestrial.

The Southern Cross Cable, operated by Bermuda company Southern Cross Cables Limited, is a trans-Pacific network of telecommunications cables commissioned in 2000.

The network has 28,900 km of submarine and 1,600 km of terrestrial fiber optic cables, operated in a triple-ring configuration. Initially, each cable had a bandwidth capacity of 120 gigabit/s,[2] but was doubled in an upgrade in April 2008,[3] with a further upgrade to 860 gigabit/s at the end of 2008.[4] Southern Cross upgraded the existing system to 1.2 Tbit/s in May 2010.[5] After successful trials of 40G technology the first 400G of a planned 800G upgrade has been completed in February 2012, with the remaining 400G completed in December 2012.[6] An additional 400G was deployed utilising 100G coherent wavelength technology in July 2013, taking total system capacity to 2.6Tbit/s, with an additional 500Gbit/s to be deployed per segment by Q2 2014, increasing total system capacity to 3.6Tbit/s.

The latest augmentation will also deploy Ciena FlexiGrid technology, increase Southern Cross potential capacity to 12 Tbit/s. Southern Cross offers capacity services from STM-1 to 100Gbit/s OTU-4, including 1G, 10G and 40G Ethernet Private Line services.

Landing points

  1. Alexandria, NSW, Australia
  2. Brookvale, NSW, Australia
  3. Suva, Fiji
  4. Whenuapai, New Zealand
  5. Takapuna, New Zealand
  6. Kahe Point, Oahu, Hawaii, United States
  7. Samuel M. Spencer Beach, Hawaiʻi island, Hawaii, USA
  8. Nedonna Beach, Oregon, USA
  9. Morro Bay, California, USA

Access points

  1. Equinix, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia (terrestrial connection only)
  2. Westin Building, Seattle, Washington, USA (terrestrial connection only)
  3. CoreSite, San Jose, California, USA (terrestrial connection only)

Network segments

The network comprises 12 segments (length of segment in brackets):

Submarine

Terrestrial

Diagram of cross section of the cable

Topology

The network topology is configured to have redundant paths and be self-healing in case of physical damage.

In the cross section diagram shown:

  1. Insulating high density polyethylene (17 mm)
  2. Copper tubing (8.3 mm)
  3. Steel wires
  4. Optical fibers in water resistant jelly (2.3 mm)

Spying and interception

Further information: Global surveillance

In 2013 the New Zealand Herald reported that the owners of the Southern Cross cable had asked the NSA to pay them for mass surveillance of New Zealand internet activity through the cable.[7] In May 2014, John Minto, vice-president of the New Zealand Mana Party, alleged that the NSA was carrying out mass surveillance on all meta-data and content that went out of New Zealand through the cable.[7]

In August 2014, New Zealand politician and Green Party co-leader, Russel Norman stated that an interception point was being established on the Southern Cross Cable.[8] Norman said that as the cable is the only point of telecommunications access from New Zealand, this would allow the Government to spy on all phone calls and internet traffic from New Zealand.[8] Norman's claims followed the revelation that an engineer from the United States National Security Agency had visited New Zealand earlier in the year to discuss how to intercept traffic on the Southern Cross cable.[8]

The office of New Zealand Prime Minister John Key, denied the claims but admitted that they were negotiating a "cable access programme" with the NSA but refused to clarify what that was or why the NSA was involved.[8]

Damage incidents

There have been several incidents damaging sections of the Southern Cross Cable, in part due to it traversing the Pacific Ocean's Ring of Fire and its long length.

In late 2007, Southern Cross Cable's operations vice president, Dean Veverka, confirmed that hurricane strength storms and flooding had wiped out the carrier's Oregon cable route and halved its bandwidth between Australia/New Zealand/Fiji and United States. A Southern Cross customer (iiNet) said that emergency works have been organised to perform a more permanent fix for the damage to the cable. These works were performed on 3 February 2008 at 12 midnight AEST.[9]

In March 2008, the then head of Telecom Wholesale, Matt Crockett, mentioned to the National Business Review that there had been a recent undersea earthquake that destroyed a shunt on the Southern Cross Cable. However, due to the Cable's redundancy and spare capacity, users experienced no change in access or speed.[10]

Construction and ownership

Construction of the cable began in July 1999, laid by the ship CS Vercors, and the system was in use by customers by November 2000. Additional works and upgrades have since taken place to increase the network's capacity to 480 Gbit/s. In August 2007, SC Cables contracted with Alcatel-Lucent to upgrade the cable to 660 Gbit/s by the end of the first quarter 2008 and to 860 Gbit/s by the end of 2008, with future upgrade also by Alcatel-Lucent to 1.2 Tbit/s in May 2010.[11]

The company is owned by Spark New Zealand (50.01%), SingTel (39.99%) and Verizon Business (10.00%).

See also

Interconnected cables

The Tonga Cable System interconnects with Southern Cross Cable[12] in Fiji.

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/26/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.