Facebook and Google invest in new undersea cables connecting the US and Singapore
Facebook expects the new cables to increase overall transpacific Internet capacity by 70%.
By Ken Wong -
The route avoids crowded shipping lanes in North Asia. Image courtesy of Facebook.
Facebook and Google are among the partners investing in two new subsea cables to increase Internet connectivity between the United States and Singapore.
Called Echo and Bifrost, the plan is for Echo to be ready for service in 2023, with Bifrost coming online a year later.
However, while Facebook will be investing in both cable projects, Google will only be investing in Echo.
According to the Facebook post, these new cables will be the first crossing the Java Sea and are expected to increase overall transpacific capacity by 70 percent. Both Echo and Bifrost will run from North America to Singapore, with a stop-over in Guam, with plans to also land in Indonesia.
Previous traffic was through cables running through north Asia past the Philippines and Taiwan. However, these were through crowded shipping lanes and areas prone to earthquakes and there were a number of times when these cables were cut with Asia losing an Internet route to the United States.
Local partners for these cable projects include Indonesian companies Telin and XL Axiata and Singapore-based Keppel Midgard Holdings (KMH), which is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Keppel T&T.
Building a connection to the future
Concept of the Singapore data centre. Image courtesy of Facebook.
Earlier this year, Google announced that their Dunant subsea cable, connecting the United States and mainland Europe, was ready for service. They are also working on Equiano, a subsea cable from Portugal to South Africa. Facebook on the other hand, has been building a hyperscale data centre in Singapore that will be supported by 100 percent renewable energy.
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