More Asian network connections restored

By Eileen Yu, ZDNet Asia
Wednesday, January 03, 2007 03:43 PM

SINGAPORE--More network connections and Internet services have been restored as businesses return to work after the year-end and new year holidays.

Internet communications across Asia, including Japan, China and Korea, suffered a complete blackout or severe network congestion after an earthquake off Taiwan's southern coastline damaged several major submarine cables connecting Asia and the United States and Europe.

Asia Netcom's EAC (East Asia Crossing) cable system was one of seven affected by the quake last Tuesday evening.

The pan-Asia datacomms service provider was, however, able to restore its network the next day because damages to its EAC cable were not severe, a company spokesperson told ZDNet Asia. A former subsidiary of the China Netcom Group, Asia Netcom is currently owned by a global investor group led by Ashmore Investment Management, Spinnaker Capital and Clearwater Capital Partners.

All services to Asia Netcom customers were fully restored, the spokesperson said, adding that the service provider was also able to reroute traffic through its southern cable ring, running through Australia.

In addition, he noted that the company has inked agreements to provide its spare bandwidth to carriers affected by the quake until their cable systems have been repaired.

Asia Netcom's engineers restored more than 100Gbps of capacity on the EAC, an equivalent to more than 20,000 broadband lines across the region. Its CTO Wilfred Kwan said in a statement: "The majority of the traffic has gone to support Asia Netcom's customers, with the remaining being provisioned to support the Internet bandwidth demands of the region's carriers and ISPs (Internet service providers)."

In Singapore, a SingTel spokesperson said the company's BlackBerry service, which was affected after the quake, has been fully restored and Internet access to international sites "has been normalized for e-mailing, browsing and online transactions". Web activities that are bandwidth-intensive such as games and video streaming, may still have some latency issues.

"As part of our cable traffic redirection effort, traffic to the United States is being rerouted via Europe or Australia as well as [through] other channels such as satellite links and landlines," he said.

According to Singapore's telecom and cable TV operator, 87 percent of its Internet traffic has been diverted to alternative routes. "As repairs on the damaged undersea cables continue off Taiwan, StarHub's engineers are working round-the-clock to reroute affected Internet traffic to other undersea cables," a spokesperson said.


WORTHWHILE?

0

0 votes
Blog

Talkback 1 comments

One thing that really puzzles me is that it is not the 1st time that Taiwan earthquake has damaged submarine cables. This time is so severe and telecos plan is just restoration with any announcement of contingency plan?

Are we waiting for another quake to total cut Asia off? Why Taiwan when it is appearent that 3 times damage is not enough to rethink putting cable elsewhere?

Circuit diversity, through Philippines, Korea or directly from Singapore. With political instability on the Taiwan surface and quake below. We need to think where we really want the cables to run.
Posted by Dylan on Thursday, January 04 2007 02:49 PM


Tech Jobs Now!

Search for your ideal tech job:

3 lessons a CIO can learn from Windows 7

Tech Management

Microsoft's missteps with Vista, and attempts at redemption with Windows 7, offers firms valuable lessons in IT, be it in rolling out a new corporate application or delivering millions of copies of a new OS.


Read more »



Ultimate 2012 recovery site: the moon

Blog thumbnail

Have you seen the disaster movie "2012"? A friend from Control Risks and I did, and we reluctantly concluded we wouldn't be able to write off the cost of our..... by Nathaniel Forbes

Read more »

Tags

  1. 3g
  2. 3g third generation
  3. apple inc.
  4. apple iphone
  5. broadband
  6. cellular phones
  7. google inc.
  8. handset
  9. internet
  10. mobile
  11. mobile platforms / communications
  12. mobile / wireless
  13. network
  14. phone
  15. revenue
  16. smart phone
  17. smart phones
  18. software
  19. u.s.
  20. web