CANTAT-3

CANTAT-3
Owners:
STC Submarine Networks, Portland, Oregon
and STC Submarine Networks in Southampton, U.K
Operator:
Teleglobe, India, now known as, Tata Communications Limited

Landing points

Design capacity 2.5 Gigabit/Second
Technology NL-16 laser regenerative
Date of first use 1994

CANTAT-3 was the third Canadian transatlantic telecommunications cable, in operation from 1994 to 2010, initially carrying 3 x 2.5 Gbit/s between Canada and Europe. It branches to both Iceland and the Faroe Islands.[1]

On December 17, 2006, CANTAT-3 services were disrupted due to damage to the submarine cable, resulting in degration of service to hundreds of thousands of users connecting via internet and media providers (Síminn, Vodafone and Hive). The country was however backed up by the second submarine cable FARICE-1 The most notable effect of the event was a temporary shut-down of data-communications by Iceland's universities and hospitals which did rely exclusively on CANTAT-3's services. Although it was predicted that a full recovery of the cable would take ten days, starting from midnight on January 13, 2007, it actually took until July 29, 2007 before it was fully restored. During that time, the Icelandic universities and hospitals in Akureyri and Reykjavík relied on emergency connectivity obtained via local internet providers Síminn and Vodafone. The Icelandic government decided not to buy extra bandwidth for the university network through the functioning FARICE-1 cable, despite being a large shareholder in FARICE-1.[2]

Landing points are:

  1. Pennant Point, Nova Scotia Canada
  2. Vestmannaeyjar, Iceland[3]
  3. Tjørnuvík, Faroe Islands
  4. Redcar, England, UK
  5. Blaabjerg, Denmark
  6. Sylt, Germany

CANTAT-3 was operated by India's Teleglobe.

CANTAT-3 was the only NL-16 laser regenerative 2.5 Gig/s submarine system built in the world. Part of this huge system was built at STC Submarine Networks, Portland, Oregon from 1993-1994 (which later became Alcatel Submarine Networks). STC Submarine Networks in Southampton, U.K. made the rest of the system. The Canadian portion (shore end system) was laid off Nova Scotia by the Teleglobe cable ship CS John Cabot. The main-lay portion was deployed off Nova Scotia towards the Faroes on board the AT&T ship Global Mariner. Other cable ships were involved in the completion of this system. This was the northern most cable system ever deployed at the time.

Given that CANTAT-3 suffered multiple[1][4] interruptions, the alternative cables FARICE-1, DANICE and Greenland Connect were established and/or expanded[1] to ensure cabled telecommunication connectivity in Iceland. CANTAT-3 also had to little capacity by 2007 for domestic Internet usage and became outdated as soon as the DANICE cable came into operation by 2009. CANTAT-3 is still in use (2016) and is powered from Iceland and connected to Sylt in Germany and Blaabjerg in Denamark. The Canadian part is not in use and the UK part to Redcar has been removed. CANTAT-3 is now connected to several oil platforms in the North Sea and that is the primary function of CANTAT-3. The current owner of CANTAT-3 is the Farose Telecom (Föroya Tele).

Notes

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, April 13, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.