Taiwan Quake Shakes
Confidence in Undersea Links
December 29, 2006 — By Jon Herskovitz and Rhee So-eui, Reuters
SEOUL — The earthquakes that hit Taiwan
on Tuesday rocked communications in Asia and underscored the
vulnerabilities of a system where huge amounts of data speed through the
region in cables laid deep beneath the sea.
Banks and brokerages from Seoul to Sydney were affected by the outage,
with analysts saying that even though a single glitch can trigger global
problems, there is little choice but to rely on this underwater network.
"Right now, there's no other network that can compete with submarine fibre-optic
cables in terms of reliability," said Jin Chang-whan, an analyst at CJ
Investment & Securities in Seoul.
The cables, which for the most part lie unprotected on the ocean floor,
can be damaged by ship anchors, fish nets that scrape the sea bottom and
even in one case, sharks that gnawed on a line apparently due to its
electromagnetic pulse, said policy think tank Rand Corporation (www.rand.org)
in a recent report.
The report predicted troubles in Taiwan could lead to major disruptions
because it would be difficult to reroute data overland on the island.
Experts said there should be few problems in the cable systems as long as
there are backup routes and carriers can cooperate in times of crisis.
Analysts said the disruption showed that most of the region's cable
networks run along earthquake-prone geographic zones.
"People will start to say we can't let this happen again," said Frank
Dzubeck, president of Washington D.C.-based telecoms consultancy
Communications Networks Architects.
"The issue here is parallelism. You've really got to have multiple paths.
You can't lay all the cables in the same place."
Dzubeck added that the Internet bust in 2001 had hit expensive plans by
various companies to lay undersea cables along new paths that were less
likely to be affected by earthquakes.
Earthquakes occur frequently around Taiwan and Japan, which lie on a
seismically active stretch of the Pacific basin.
Undersea fibre-optic cables account for more than 95 percent of
international telecommunications thanks to their strength, capacity and
connection quality, according to South Korean provider KT Submarine Corp.
One alternative would be satellites, which are costlier and do not provide
as much capacity or quality of transmission as fibre-optic cables,
analysts said.
Just last week, Verizon Communications Inc. and five Asian companies
agreed to invest $500 million to build a new cable network to directly
link China and the United States.
BETTER THAN PIGEONS
Submarine cables have been around for about 150 years, with the some of
the first lines being a well-insulated copper wire running under the
English Channel. One alternative used at the time to transmit data was the
carrier pigeon.
Now the cables hold a mass of tightly packed, flexible glass lines that
can handle millions of telephone calls, which means that any damage can
lead to major disruptions.
A country such as South Korea, the world's 11th largest economy, has 10
main undersea cables connecting it to the world, said KT Corp., the
country's top fixed-line and broadband service provider. Seven of them
were damaged by the quake.
India was highly vulnerable from damage to undersea cable links because it
receives 80 percent to 90 percent of its bandwidth from the undersea
network, industry officials said.
And neighbouring Pakistan's sole undersea fibre-optic cable link with the
outside world developed a serious fault in June 2005, virtually crippling
data feeds, including the Internet, for 11 days.
"Internet service providers should think like bus companies," said Mohamed
Shahril Tarmizi, executive director at Malaysian technology consulting
company BinaFikir.
"Instead of using just one route to get to a destination, it's more useful
to have many routes." (With additional reporting by Sumeet Chatterjee in
Bangalore, Niluksi Koswanage in Kuala Lumpor, Baker Li in Taipei, Sachi
Izumi in Tokyo and Yinka Adegoke in New York)
Source: Reuters