back to article New submarine cable to link Japan, Europe, through famed Northwest Passage

In the 15th century, European traders that hoped to reach Asia had problems: a round trip by land or sea took years and involved many lethal perils. Navigators of the day therefore imagined sailing the “Northwest Passage,” a route across the Atlantic, then over the top of North America, before sliding south to Japan. Sadly, …

  1. Clausewitz 4.0
    Devil

    Avoiding NSA tapping?

    Hmmm NSA will not be pleased to not see this cable in its patch panel... So easier to do the job then go full submarine...

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Big Brother

      Re: Avoiding NSA tapping?

      Fat chance. The NSA and the Russians and the Chinese all have submarines and ROVs that can splice in their taps.

      Nobody's secrets are safe from Big Brother.

      1. Petalium
        Trollface

        Re: Avoiding NSA tapping?

        They should ask the big snoopers for financing for the cable and let them install their equipment from the beginning, cheaper for everyone!

        1. Persona

          Re: Avoiding NSA tapping?

          They normally do.

      2. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Avoiding NSA tapping?

        Big Browser, surely?

      3. Alan Brown Silver badge

        Re: Avoiding NSA tapping?

        USN Jimmy Carter is on the case

    2. A Non e-mouse Silver badge

      Re: Avoiding NSA tapping?

      The article mentions it touches Alaska. Ergo, NSA will have their fat hands all over it. (Plus the fact that it passes close to Alaska surely makes adding a tap much easier)

    3. rcxb1

      Re: Avoiding NSA tapping?

      They get bored if you always make things too easy for them.

      They love any opportunity to pull out their big, expensive toys.

  2. buiv

    Is any line sabotaged by a rogue actor purposely before anywhere around the world??

    1. Skiron
      Paris Hilton

      Will Huawei be involved? The Yanks won't like that!

    2. phuzz Silver badge

      Nothing proven as far as I can tell, although it's widely acknowledged that various nations have used submarines to tap into undersea cables. I wouldn't be surprised if occasionally they accidentally broke the cable trying to install/remove the tap.

  3. Neil Barnes Silver badge
    Coat

    Will they be seeking the hand of Franklin?

    (c) Stan Rogers

    1. OssianScotland
      Pint

      Re: Will they be seeking the hand of Franklin?

      Unfortunately I have only one upvote to give you, so have a vBeer (TM) instead.

      Heads off towards YouTube.... Now which one first, Northwest Passage or Mary Ellen Carter?

  4. Geoff Campbell Silver badge
    Holmes

    Who are the customers?

    I wonder if the backers of this have done their homework?

    Phase 2 of Starlink will be going live shortly, that's the bit where the satellites use frickin' lasers to make inter-continental latencies rather lower than can be achieved by terrestrial fibre (because the speed of light in a vacuum is much faster than the speed of light in optical fibre).

    Sure, the satellite systems aren't so good for really big bulk data transfers that fibre can handle well, but those don't tend to be latency sensitive, so they can go via the established routes.

    Still, more connectivity is always good, so good luck to them.

    GJC

    1. Chris G

      Re: Who are the customers?

      Its probably harder to shoot down an undersea cable, plus there is a possibility eventually of legislation limiting satellite constellations.

      With billionaires willy waving their way into space plus others thinking to make money from connecting remote hunter/gatherers to tik tok, space will become too busy for sensible users.

      1. phuzz Silver badge

        Re: Who are the customers?

        While undersea cables are safe from most conventional weapons, but they're pretty vulnerable to something as simple as a boat dragging it's anchor in the wrong place. Also, where they come on-shore, all it takes is a JCB digging in the wrong/right place.

        I'm pretty sure any country able to attack satellites also has submarines they could use to attack cables as well.

    2. sebacoustic

      Re: Who are the customers?

      Neve underestimate the bandwidth of a 1000ft container ship laden with LTO tapes...

      1. newspuppy

        Re: Who are the customers?

        Never forget the 'pilot' of the 1000ft container ship laden with LTO tapes.... dealing with wind and in the suez canal.

    3. Lars Silver badge
      Happy

      Re: Who are the customers?

      Yes, but the distance is also longer using satellites.

      1. NerryTutkins

        Re: Who are the customers?

        Significantly for geo-stationary orbit, but for newer satellite constellations with hundreds of satellites in low earth orbit, the difference in distanced is marginal, and could even be less depending on how many curves there need to be in the subsea cable.

      2. Geoff Campbell Silver badge

        Re: Who are the customers?

        Not enough to make a significant difference in the case of LEO satellites, at 4-600km up.

        GJC

    4. SImon Hobson Bronze badge

      Re: Who are the customers?

      Trouble with satellite is that either :

      They are whizzing about very fast (from our viewpoint) and hence you have "significant" challenges with very frequent handovers from one bird to the next. That will potentially cause frequent but very short drops or pauses in traffic, as well as variable latency.

      Or they are very high up in which case you have massive latency getting the traffic between the birds and the ground. Many of us will remember the days when international phone calls went via satellite - and the round trip latency of (from dim and vague memory) around a second made interactive conversations "interesting".

      Or somewhere in-between so you get both problems.

      1. Geoff Campbell Silver badge

        Re: Who are the customers?

        Starlink are in the "very fast" category, but doesn't suffer from handover problems. I've been using it for a while now, and everything Just Works(tm).

        GJC

        1. rcxb1

          Re: Who are the customers?

          > doesn't suffer from handover problems. I've been using it for a while now

          Oh? Have you been doing lengthy VoIP calls? Where you'd notice latency.

          1. Geoff Campbell Silver badge

            Re: Who are the customers?

            Yes, I work from home and often spend half a day in a single video conference. No noticeable problems with latency (as expected, it's measured at around 30-40ms) or drop-outs of any sort. It has been a genuine revelation for rural broadband.

            GJC

          2. vtcodger Silver badge

            Re: Who are the customers?

            Well, the longest direct (great circle) distance possible on Earth is -- pretty much by definition -- 20,000km. Assuming various delays double that, the maximum latency would be around 40000/300000 sec = 0.133 sec = 133 msec. Annoying, but not intolerable for most usage I think. And, of course, typical delays possibly would be less. How often do most of us talk to our antipodes?

            Of course, there's no guarantee that Starlink when fully loaded will have latencies as low as 133 msec. 133msec is just a number that might, maybe, be achievable.

            1. Geoff Campbell Silver badge

              Re: Who are the customers?

              The high-frequency traders will pay significant money for each single millisecond you can shave off of their latency to the exchanges. They make money by being the first to place a trade, or something.

              GJC

      2. Jellied Eel Silver badge

        Re: Who are the customers?

        There's also latency between Earth stations and final destinations. So if there's no station in Alaska, traffic might end up going via terrestrial capacity from somewhere else in N.America. There's also the additional challenge with peering and transit connections between Starlink's cloud and the rest of the Internet.

        I'm curious about how routing will work when there's hundreds of fast moving nodes. Normally IGPs assume a relatively static network topology. I guess orbital paths could be semi-stable, ie a ring rotating and path between satellites in that orbit being relatively fixed. Creating a moving mesh will be an interesting challenge though. As more beta customers sign up, there should be more data regarding latency, asymmetry and reliability of UDP traffic.

        1. rcxb1
          Coat

          Re: Who are the customers?

          > if there's no station in Alaska, traffic might end up going via terrestrial capacity from somewhere else in N.America

          I'm going to go out on a limb and say they're not doing all this just to get high speed access from Europe to the 400,000 people on the southern coast of Alaska... I'm also pretty confident there will be a few Starlink stations in Asia and Europe.

          1. Jellied Eel Silver badge

            Re: Who are the customers?

            Yup. The recent Musk missive to staff about potential SpaceX bankrupty had an interesting comment. Apparently the business case for v1 satellites is shaky due to capacity constraints. And to solve that, they need v2. But those can't be launched from Falcon, or Falcon Heavy. So seemed like there's a big dependency on fixing their Raptor problem. And then launching a Starship evey 2 weeks to build their v2 constellation.

            Then there's politcs. So SpaceX has been heavily subsidised to solve the rural broadband problem. I stumbled across the YT channel of one of the characters from Bering Sea Gold. Vid showed the cost of living in Nome, Alaska which included being charged $800/month for broadband. Which is the problem with serving rural locations. Starlink should save subscribers money, but as you say, probably won't result in HFTs setting up in Nome.

      3. Persona

        Re: Who are the customers?

        Yes latency will vary due to path changes and handovers, however it should still beat an undersea cable over a long distance. For high frequency trading arbitrage this is enough. If the latency variation was a problem you could simple introduce a variable delay to pad it out to a constant value that was still better than the undersea cable.

        1. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: Who are the customers?

          A Tobin Tax would be as good as Invermectin for ridding the host of the parasites.

    5. Nifty Silver badge

      Re: Who are the customers?

      If Starlink latency proves to be genuinely better than undersea fibre, one use-case will be high frequency stock and commodities trading. That was what spurred the first near straight line fibre connection in the US. This movie is on my Xmas streaming list:

      The Hummingbird Project

      https://www.imdb.com/title/tt6866224/

      1. Bitsminer Silver badge

        Re: Who are the customers?

        One option is to put your high-frequency traders in the middle of the fibre link, say, in Resolute. The data packets can meet in the middle between London and Tokyo (or Paris/Shanghai or what have you).

        I'm sure the 198 current inhabitants of Resolute (English name), also known as Qausuittuq (ᖃᐅᓱᐃᑦᑐᖅ) would love to have the likes of a Wolf of Wall Street in their midst. Or even two.

      2. Alan Brown Silver badge

        Re: Who are the customers?

        " one use-case will be high frequency stock and commodities trading."

        This has been postulated as the real moneyspinner long term for Starlink. Transatlantic latency would be significantly lower than anything cable can do whilst transpacific is simply unbeatable even with polar cables

    6. Alan Brown Silver badge

      Re: Who are the customers?

      fibre has bigger bandwidth than satellites

      Almost all the existing europe/asia big data cables cross the Sinai and have proven susceptable to dragging anchors at the north end of the Red Sea. IIRC there was an event where ONE ship knocked out 4 cables in 20 minutes whilst waiting to transit the Suez Canal

      Landbased cables have their own sets of problems and vulnerabilities no matter how hard operators try (where diggers don't succeed in screwing things up, thieves do it instead)

      This is sorely needed geographic diversity

    7. spold Silver badge
      Facepalm

      Re: Who are the customers?

      Penguins.

      Penguins as a Service (PaaS) customers.

      A d'oh for the naturalistically challenged. There are penguins - sometimes they escape the zoo.

      1. JamesTGrant
        Linux

        Re: Who are the customers?

        BaaS or PBaaS shurrly, PaaS only available in Southern Hemisphere

    8. ssharwood

      Re: Who are the customers?

      FWIW I'm aware of cables that have, on day one of operations, already booked so much traffic that they project covering construction costs within 2 years. Cables are surprisingly cheap to build and opex is not enormous.

    9. SCP

      Re: Who are the customers?

      "the speed of light in a vacuum is much faster than the speed of light in optical fibre"

      Reduced latency in long haul is also one of the benefits expected of Hollow Core Fibre (but still in trials so probably not an option here).

  5. DaemonProcess

    Resurrect Goonhilly

    We should never have chopped Goonhilly in Cornwall. Putin is already threatening to chop our internet cables and our gas over Ukraine.

    Of course, these days, it would be better to have 1000 micro-Goonhillies communicating over Starlink or similar.

    WSPR anyone? :-)) We will soon be back to short wave and the Lincolnshire poacher.

    1. Clausewitz 4.0
      Devil

      Re: Resurrect Goonhilly

      In favor here of having short wave radios as backup just in case of a major issue.. Be it..

      Aliens

      Nukes

      Zombies

      Global warming

    2. Steve Davies 3 Silver badge

      Re: Starlink

      didn't Putin's mob demonstrate downing a satellite just recently?

      We'll be back to using semaphore flag towers before we know it.

      1. Down not across

        Re: Starlink

        Clacks towers you mean?

        1. Nifty Silver badge

          Re: Starlink

          The Romans used mirrors.

      2. SImon Hobson Bronze badge

        Re: Starlink

        didn't Putin's mob demonstrate downing a satellite just recently?

        I vaguely recall having read several stories of someone or other demonstrating that they have the capability. But even without hostile action, there is a worry amongst many experts in the field that it's getting a bit crowded up there - especially in the geo-stationary orbit. All it could take is for one bird to be hit by a bit of the millions of bits of man-made shrapnel up there (not to mention bits of rock) to hit one bird, and that could set off a chain reaction as more and more shrapnel is produced which destroys whatever's left at an increasing rate.

        If that happened, then \<sarcasm mode\>civilisation as we know it would end. All those who got rid of their terrestrial telly dish would be without telly - and for those of use still using terrestrial, some material might be slower arriving on our channels. Hordes of zombies would be unable to drive anywhere through lack of directions from the electronic back seat driver.

        1. Down not across

          Re: Starlink

          If that happened, then \<sarcasm mode\>civilisation as we know it would end. All those who got rid of their terrestrial telly dish would be without telly - and for those of use still using terrestrial, some material might be slower arriving on our channels. Hordes of zombies would be unable to drive anywhere through lack of directions from the electronic back seat driver.

          That sounds like an improvement.

        2. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: Starlink

          There's a good chance that there won't be ANY satellites by the end of he century.

          Working ones at least.

          No one will be stopping a scorched space action.

  6. Old Used Programmer

    For a book about the far North...

    ...I'd be inclined to recommend Peter Freuchen's autobiography, _Vagrant Viking_. (Freuchen, by the way, was the guy who named Thule, Greenland. He also advised Thor Heyerdahl to use native methods to build the Kon Tiki expedition raft.)

  7. ssieler

    So, based on the countries/states touched, it's the JIG CAN IF cable?

    (thanks, Internet Anagram Server :)

  8. xyz123 Silver badge

    Given how Russia keeps reducing flow to the Nord pipelines for EU gas, trusting any internet cable that was designed/built by Russia or passed over their territory is a Bad Idea.

    Can only imagine how every single data packet on those cables is recorded in a Russia Datacenter somewhere, for when tech catches up to encryption cracking.

    1. Claverhouse Silver badge

      Whilst the Americans will capture these packets anyway. Guarding the Guardians.

      The late Constantine Fitzgibbon would be expecting this, as in the mirror theory of the two superpowers...

      Not that Russia is still a superpower --- not that that stops the Yank Imperium.

      .

      .

      As for Nordstreams I & II, poor demented old Cruz has made a deal with his equal idiot Schumer [ the latter got easy confirmations of putative ambassadors * in return ] to have a vote in the US Congress in January to discuss imposing still further sanctions on what essentially is none of America's business.

      Equivalent to London screaming like bables over a private transaction between someone in Nigeria and someone in Malaysia. Nordstream will run and run.

      Still while there are sunk costs, Russia can cool it on supply at her own timing for now.

      .

      .

      * Amongst these Ambassadors are People's Representatives, horny of hand and powerful of mind, democratic voices to guide the weak and powerless: Caroline Kennedy and Rahm Emanuel.

      1. batfink

        Yes - Nordstream seems to be a logical response to having one of the main existing traffic routes - through Ukraine - now traversing hostile territory. So, the traffic has been routed around the problem.

        This causes a big problem for Ukraine,as the transit payments of a few $Bn per year look like they're going to stop in 2024. That is going to put a big hole in the local corruption gravy train. Ergo, Ukraine is currently kicking up as big a stink as possible to stop it.

        The frankly hysterical reaction of the US to Nordstream 2 (Threatening to individually sanction the mayor of the German town where it comes ashore? WTF?) makes me think that some important people there must also be hit in the pocket by the impending cutoff.

        1. Insert sadsack pun here

          "This causes a big problem for Ukraine..."

          It's what you mention, and more. Right now Europe will kick off if gas supply to Ukraine is interrupted or Ukraine is "properly" invaded. Once Europe gets most of its gas through Nord Stream, they're not gonna give a f if Russia invades Ukraine or cuts off the gas (which would kill thousands of people in winter). Europe has inadvertently sacrificed its buffer state.

          1. Jellied Eel Silver badge

            Much of the politics is probably around the US protecting it's own exports. The shale boom lead to building LNG export terminals on the east and west coast. If the EU buys Russian gas, US east coast terminals have a smaller market.

            Then there's policy failures. So Germany's decision to close it's nuclear plants, along with other countries either closing their plants per policy, or just reaching end of life. So quite a lot of GW of firm capacity exiting the market, and being replaced with expensive and unreliable 'renewables'. And at the same time, decarbonisation policies will massively increase demand for electricity. Given 'renewables' intermittentcy, that will also increase demand for gas for stand-by generation.

            So basically a bunch of policy failures landing on energy users. Plus market failures, like Germany having the EU's largest gas storage, which is rapidly emptying. Luckily it's been a mild winter so far, but if it turns cold, there will be problems. And in the UK, we're being told to bend over and expect a 50% increase in energy bills to pay for market and policy failures.

            1. Claverhouse Silver badge

              Plus market failures, like Germany having the EU's largest gas storage, which is rapidly emptying

              We in independent UKistan have cleverly avoided this fate by already having the lowest gas storage in Europe. Just in Time !

              2% of annual demand the last time I looked, compared with those scaredy-cats average of 20%.

              I fully expect Boris to denounce them for hoarding.

              1. Jellied Eel Silver badge

                Yeh, ISTR the UK producing it's own oil, gas and coal shielding us from the '70s oil crisis. But I need to dig deeper into gas. EU blames Russia, Russia says they're delivering everything that's been contracted. Curious if that means gas buyers didn't contract via the Yamal pipeline because they'd assumed Nordstream would be online. Regardless, if the problem is due to suppliers not booking enough gas, we shouldn't be rewarding them for failure.

                Then again, creating a scarcity creates a price rise, and boosts profits. Probably why Enron bought a gas storage field before they imploded.

    2. batfink

      Yes - filthy Russkies. They're the only ones tapping cables. Clearly.

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