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UNDERSEA COMMUNICATIONS
DATA TRANSMISSION & POWER CABLES
We don’t hear much about undersea communications cables, even
though they carry around 99% of international internet traffic. Without
undersea cables, the internet as we know it would not exist.
By Dr David Maddison, VK3DSM
U
ndersea communications cables
are the most invisible and yet one
of the most important parts of the internet. Compared to alternatives such as
satellites, cables are much cheaper and
offer much lower latency (delays due
to the time the signal takes).
As of June 2024, there were 600
active or planned submarine communications cables and 1.4 million kilometres of cables in service (see Fig.1).
The lengths range from 131km for the
CeltixConnect-1 (CC-1) from Dublin,
Ireland to Holyhead, United Kingdom to 20,000km for the Asia-America
Gateway (AAG) Cable System from the
United States to various places in Asia
and the Pacific.
There are usually multiple cables
connecting each country to provide
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Silicon Chip
redundancy in case of accidental or
deliberate damage.
Communications cables carry not
only internet traffic including video
but also telephone calls and private
computer networks. Undersea communications cables originate with the
first undersea telegraph cables. There
are also undersea power-
c arrying
cables.
Undersea telegraph cables
Before there was significant (or any)
radio traffic, there was an extensive
network of undersea telegraph cables.
Fig.2 shows the Eastern Telegraph
Company’s international telegraph
network in 1901.
On the 12th of December, 1901, Marconi conducted the first transatlantic
Australia's electronics magazine
radio transmission from Cornwall
(UK) to Newfoundland (Canada),
using a 150m-long kite-supported
antenna for reception. Marconi established a commercial service for ships
at sea in 1904 and a transatlantic
radio-telegraph service in 1907. However, that service was not reliable for
many years.
Thus, there was still a demand for
cabled telegraph services in the early
1900s. Today, there is still competition
for communications between optical
fibre and wireless services, including
via satellites.
Land-based cables were uninsulated and suspended between poles,
but subsea cables must be insulated.
Few suitable materials were known in
the early 1800s.
siliconchip.com.au
In 1843, Michael Faraday sent samples of the natural rubber-like material
gutta-percha from a tree of the same
name from Singapore to London for
testing. In 1845, Sir Charles Wheatstone suggested it be used to insulate
a cable between Dover and Calais.
The cable was laid in 1850 and was
successful.
The first attempt at laying a telegraph cable across the Atlantic was
in 1858; it was ultimately unsuccessful. It was laid between Ireland and
Newfoundland and worked extremely
slowly for a few weeks before being
destroyed by applying too high a
voltage (2000V) to it in an attempt to
speed it up.
The problem was that signals were
‘smeared out’ at the receiving end,
significantly reducing the transmission rate, as subsequent signals would
interfere with prior signals. This was
due to cable capacitance. The cable
acts as a long, thin capacitor, with one
electrode being the conductive seawater on the outside and the other the
central conductor.
This meant the transmission rate
had to be dramatically reduced to
receive intelligible signals. The speed
was so slow that a 99-word transmission between Queen Victoria and President James Buchanan took 16.5 hours,
or ten minutes per word.
Incidentally, in a classic engineering
error, two cables were ordered from
two suppliers and were provided with
cable twists running in opposite directions. This would have made splicing
them impossible, so a special bracket
was improvised to hold the wires.
Fig.1: just some of the current submarine cables worldwide. Source: www.
submarinecablemap.com
Transmission line theory
In those early years, transmission
line theory, shown in Fig.3, was poorly
understood. In 1855, the future Lord
Kelvin (William Thomson) made some
theoretical progress and developed a
model that predicted the poor performance of the 1858 cable. However,
that did not lead to a complete understanding because he only considered
capacitance and resistance but not
inductance in the cable.
Although Lord Kelvin was involved
in that cable project, his concerns
were not heeded due to internal company squabbles. He wanted a thicker
cable. Nevertheless, he developed a
highly sensitive mirror galvanometer to detect signals on the cable (see
Fig.4). Morse dots and dashes were
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.2: undersea and overland telegraph cables of the Eastern Telegraph
Company, the largest cable company in the world in 1901. Source: www.
zmescience.com/other/great-pics/map-undersea-cables-18112010
Fig.3: an electrical model of a transmission line, such as an undersea telegraph
cable, with resistive (R), conductive (G), capacitive (C) & inductive (L) components
Australia's electronics magazine
December 2024 15
represented by negative or positive
pulses rather than pulses of differing
duration.
In 1876, Oliver Heaviside revolutionised the understanding of transmission lines and published the first
of his papers on analysing the propagation of signals in cables. They included
the ‘telegrapher’s equations’:
δ/δx V(x, t) = -L δ/δt I(x, t) − RI(x, t)
δ/δx I(x, t) = -C δ/δt V(x, t) − GV(x, t)
These use resistance, conductance,
inductance and current to predict voltage and current distributions in transmission lines as a function of distance
and time. They are derived from Maxwell’s equations.
More transatlantic cables
A second cable was laid in 1865,
but it broke over halfway across and
could not be recovered after numerous attempts. A third cable was laid in
1866, which was successful. The 1865
cable was also retrieved and repaired,
so there were two cables in service.
Remarkably, although it took several
attempts, the 1865 cable was recovered with a grappling hook at a depth
of 4km. The line speed was decent at
seven words per minute, much faster
than the 1858 cable. Like the 1858
cable, these were laid between Ireland
and Newfoundland.
The effective line speed was further
improved with Julius Wilhelm Gintl’s
development of duplex transmission
Fig.4: Thomson’s mirror
galvanometer could detect
extremely small currents. Source:
https://w.wiki/AoEY
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Silicon Chip
in 1872, which allowed two messages
to be sent simultaneously in different
directions. In 1874, Thomas Edison
invented quadruplex transmission,
which allowed four messages to be
sent simultaneously on one cable, two
in each direction.
Fig.5 shows manufacturer samples
of the 1858, 1865 and 1866 cables.
Each cable had a thicker version for
the shore and continental shelf sections and a thinner version for the
deep ocean.
Note that there was no repeater technology in this period (as used routinely
today), so a signal needed to travel the
entire length of the cable without being
amplified or having its waveform conditioned in any way. That made the
feat of transoceanic communications
even more formidable.
In 1866, a transatlantic telegraph
message cost US$10 per word with
a ten-word minimum. Back then,
$100 was 10 weeks’ pay for a skilled
worker. That is equivalent to US$2000
or $3000 today – for a ten-word message!
The first undersea telegraph
cable connecting Australia
● The first undersea telegraph cable
connecting the Australian mainland
to Tasmania was built in 1859. It had
numerous problems and was abandoned in 1861. Another cable was
installed in 1869, running from Cape
Shanck, Vic to Low Head, Tas.
● In 1871, the first cable connecting Australia to the rest of the world
was installed from Darwin to Singapore via Java (see Figs.6 & 7). It was
described at the time thus (siliconchip.
au/link/abyz):
The cable consists of seven small
copper wires—a central one, with the
six twisted round it. It is insulated by
gutta-percha, over this is a coating
of tarred hemp, then a sheathing of
galvanised iron wire, with an outside
covering of tarred hemp. The deep sea
portion is three-quarters of an inch in
diameter, the intermediate one inch,
and the shore ends (twenty miles in
length) three inches in diameter.
There is much information about
this cable at siliconchip.au/link/abz0
● In 1876, the first undersea cable
was laid between Australia and New
Zealand.
● In 1889, a third international link
was laid from Broome, WA to Batavia
(Jakarta).
● In 1891, a cable was laid from
Bundaberg, Qld to Gomen (New Caledonia).
● In 1901, another cable was run
from the Cocos-Keeling Islands to
Perth, part of the global “Red Route”
cable through British territories.
● In 1902, a cable was added from
Southport, Qld to Canada via Fiji and
Norfolk Island.
For more information on the Southport cable, see the telegraph display
in The Gold Coast Historical Museum
Fig.5: a manufacturer’s sample case of products for the 1858, 1865 and 1866
Atlantic Cables manufactured by Glass, Elliot, and Co. They merged into
Telegraph Construction and Maintenance Co. Source: https://atlantic-cable.
com/Article/AtlanticCables
Australia's electronics magazine
siliconchip.com.au
(www.gcmuseum.com.au) at 8 Elliot
St, Surfers Paradise. You can see the
remains of the cable hut of the Pacific
Cable Station at Cable Park, Main
Beach Parade, Main Beach, Gold Coast
City. The Cable Station operated from
1902 to 1962.
The All Red Line
The All Red Line was a system of
telegraph lines and undersea cables
that linked most countries of the British Empire (Fig.8). The colour red was
the traditional colour used on maps to
indicate British Empire countries and
colonies. It was built because the UK
had security concerns about a vital
cable network with landfalls that were
not on territory they controlled.
The first successful part of the cable
was from Ireland to Newfoundland,
Canada in 1866. The network was completed in 1902 with a final trans-Pacific
cable from British Columbia, Canada
to Fanning Island (then part of the
UK and roughly in the middle of the
Pacific Ocean).
That section of the cable was
funded by the UK, Canada, New Zealand, New South Wales, Victoria and
Queensland. Australia’s first connection to the cable was from Darwin to
Singapore via Java in 1871.
Fig.6: a portion of the original Darwin to Java cable recovered from the Timor
Sea in 2016. Source: https://digital-classroom.nma.gov.au/images/section-portdarwin-java-underwater-telegraph-cable-1871-72
Fig.7: bringing the cable to shore at Darwin in 1871. Source: www.pastmasters.
org.au/overland-telegraph-amp-undersea-cables.html
Cable circuits
Telegraph cables generally had one
central conductor. The return current
path of single-core telegraph cables
was through the sea; although sea
water is not nearly as conductive as
copper, the cross-section is high, so
the resistance is low. At the low frequency of Morse transmission, such
an arrangement worked satisfactorily.
The currents involved in transoceanic telegraphy were extremely small
and susceptible to many forms of landbased electrical interference. Therefore, the Earth electrodes for cables
were run many kilometres out to sea
to minimise such interference (see
siliconchip.au/link/abz1 for further
information).
Fig.8: the All Red Line of telegraph cables connecting the British Empire, built
between 1866 and 1902. Source: https://w.wiki/AoEZ
Increasing telegraph speed
One way of increasing the speed
of a telegraph cable was to wrap the
inner conductor with mu-metal, which
is typically used today for magnetic
shielding. Mu-metal was invented in
1923 and was used to provide inductive loading of subsea telegraph cables
(see Fig.9) to compensate for the
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.9: “Loaded cable” as used on part of the Pacific cable
route to increase transmission speed between England and
Australia: (a) conductor made of copper; (b) continuous winding of “mumetal”
wire; (c) gutta-percha insulation; (d) inner wrapping of jute; (e) sheathing of
steel wires; (f) coating of composition; (g) outer wrapping of jute with external
coating. Source: https://atlantic-cable.com/Cables/1902PacificGB
Australia's electronics magazine
December 2024 17
plastic jacket
dielectric insulator
metallic shield
centre core
Fig.10: the structure of a typical
coaxial cable. A subsea cable has
many more layers of insulation,
reinforcement and armour.
Source: https://w.wiki/AoEa
Fig.12: how the repeaters were powered for the first transatlantic
communications cable, TAT-1.
cable’s capacitance. This enabled a
much greater transmission rate.
For example, in 1926, the busiest
part of the Pacific cable from Fiji to
Vancouver was duplicated with this
‘loaded cable’, increasing the transmission from 200 to 1000 letters per
minute.
Telephony through
subsea cables
Fig.11: a cross-section of TAT-1
coaxial cable. Source: https://w.wiki/
AoEb
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Silicon Chip
Single-wire subsea telegraph cables
with Earth returns are unsuitable for
voice because the attenuation is too
great at higher frequencies due to
cable inductance and capacitance. The
signal was distorted and the cables
were also too susceptible to interference. In 1877, Alexander Graham Bell
attempted to make a telephone call
over the Atlantic telegraph cable but
the experiment failed.
One attempt to resolve such problems was to ‘pupinise’ (named after
Michael Pupin) a subsea cable. This
involved adding inductors (loading
coils) at regular intervals along it with
balanced pairs of wires to increase its
inductance, thus offsetting its capacitance. This method also allowed the
use of thinner, cheaper wires.
This technique was independently
discovered by George Campbell at
AT&T and Michael Pupin at Columbia University, based on Oliver Heaviside’s theory. Still, there were limits
to the distance over which this technique was effective.
A pupinised cable was laid across
Lake Constance in Switzerland in
1906, and in 1910, such a cable was
laid across Chesapeake Bay with 17
pairs of conductors.
Pupinised cables had problems; the
waterproofing materials available at
the time were inadequate, and bulges
in the cable where the inductors were
installed mechanically weakened it.
Continuous loading, with no cutoff
frequency, was a superior method of
Australia's electronics magazine
solving the same problems as pupinisation.
A project to install a continuously
loaded transatlantic cable was underway in the 1930s, but it was abandoned
during the Great Depression.
By the late 1930s, repeaters and
multiplexing provided more capacity on the same number of circuits at
a lower cost, so cable loading was no
longer necessary.
Transatlantic radiotelephony
A transatlantic radiotelephony service was also established in 1927.
It charged US$45 for three minutes,
equivalent to about US$800 or $1200
today. Thus, plenty of financial incentives existed to develop a cheaper
service, but certain technological
advances were required.
Such advances included synthetic
polyethylene insulation to replace
rubber and gutta-percha from 1947
and reliable vacuum tubes for repeaters and coaxial cable. Modern coaxial
cable was patented in 1929, although
Nikola Tesla obtained a similar patent in 1894.
Coaxial subsea telephone
cables
Coaxial cables have an inner conductor plus a shield around the outside (see Fig.10).
They can carry high-frequency signals with low losses and are therefore
suitable for many telephone circuits
and/or data/video. Coaxial cables are
superior to single or multiple conductors in subsea cables.
The first transatlantic telegraph
cables (from 1858) were coaxial, but
transmission line theory was not fully
developed at the time, so they could
not operate at high speeds.
The first modern subsea coaxial cable was laid in 1936 and ran
300km between Apollo Bay near Melbourne and Stanley, Tas. It carried six
siliconchip.com.au
Perspex
Bar
Supervisory Directional Filter
Unit
(removed)
Power
Bridge &
Separating
Equaliser
Filter
Amplifier
Valves
Directional
Brass
Resistor
Filter
Cylinder
Box Housing Cable Centre Gland Cover Armour Wires Sea Cable
Conductor
Bridge &
Power
Armour
Equaliser
Separating
Watertight
Cable
Diaphragm
Bulkhead Seal
Wire Clamp
(removed)
Filter
Gland
Fig.13: a cutaway of the repeaters used for TAT-1. Source: https://collection.sciencemuseumgroup.org.uk/objects/co33321/
submerged-repeater-for-tat-1-1956-amplifier
telephone circuits, at least a dozen
telegraph circuits and an 8.5kHz
broadcast channel. For further information, see siliconchip.au/link/abz2
In 1956, the first intercontinental transatlantic coaxial cable, TAT-1
(Transatlantic No. 1), was installed (see
Fig.11). It carried 35 telephone channels, with a 36th channel carrying 22
telegraph lines (used by Telex). There
were two separate cables, one for each
direction, each 41mm in diameter.
TAT-1 used valve (vacuum tube)
repeaters to boost and condition the
signals. Each repeater had three valves.
Valves were specially developed for
this: the 6P12 for the shallow water
portion and the 175HQ for the deepsea portion. The repeaters were at
69km intervals and were 2.74m long,
73mm in diameter and flexible so they
could be wound over the cable drum
– see Fig.13. Power was supplied via
the cable (see Fig.12).
Each repeater unit was unidirectional to minimise size, so it was compatible with cable-laying equipment
while also minimising the effect of
stray capacitance and inductance. For
more details, see siliconchip.au/link/
abz3 and siliconchip.au/link/abz4
From 1963, TAT-1 carried the original primary circuit for the famous
“Moscow–Washington hotline”.
The original bandwidth of TAT-1
was 4kHz per phone channel, but it
was reduced to 3kHz to allow for a
total of 48 channels. Three additional
channels were added using a carrier-
suppressed ‘Type C’ modulation
scheme (siliconchip.au/link/abz5).
In 1960, a Time-Assignment Speech
Interpolation (TASI) system was
implemented on the cable, increasing the number of speech circuits to
72. TASI uses the idle time on calls
to carry additional calls. For more
information on TASI, see siliconchip.
au/link/abz6
TAT-1 was in operation until 1978.
siliconchip.com.au
The valve repeaters proved extremely
reliable, and the cable might still be in
use had it not become obsolete due to
its low bandwidth.
Australia’s first submarine
telephone cable
The first subsea coaxial cable for
telephony connecting Australia to
the world was the COMPAC cable,
which began service in 1963. It connected to Canada via New Zealand,
Fiji and Hawaii, as shown in Fig.14.
A microwave link across Canada and
the transatlantic CANTAT cable connected it to the UK.
It provided 80 two-way telephone
channels or 1760 teleprinter circuits,
including leased lines. The cable was
32mm in diameter in the offshore sections. A video from 1963 about the
project, “80 Channels Under The Sea”,
can be viewed at is at https://youtu.
be/m1sfMjTyjPo
Before the COMPAC cable, Australia had operated an international
radio telephone service since the 30th
of April 1930. People had to rely on
booking a radiotelephone call, which
was transmitted by HF radio and could
only be made at particular times of
day, depending upon atmospheric
conditions.
Optical fibre cables
The next major development
beyond submarine coaxial cables was
optical fibre cables. Optical fibres for
communications are made of high-
purity glass that can transmit data via
pulses of laser light at one or more frequencies. Light stays within the fibre
due to total internal reflection.
Optical fibres offer many advantages. The data rate achievable is
many times faster than over coaxial
cable, and the signal loss is lower.
Fibre is immune to electrical interference and harder to intercept by hostile actors. More optical fibres can be
inserted into an undersea cable (or
anywhere) than coaxial cables, as
they are much smaller in diameter
and weigh less.
Fig.14: a COMPAC cable map from Voices Through The Deep (1963), NZ Post
Office. Source: https://heritageetal.blogspot.com/2020/09/the-many-lives-of-emervyn-taylors.html
Australia's electronics magazine
December 2024 19
Fig.15: a cross-section of a submarine optical fibre communications cable. The
copper or aluminium tube is both for protection and to carry power, while the
petroleum jelly provides lubrication. Original source: https://w.wiki/7ojk
Fig.16 shows the basic elements of
an individual ‘single-mode’ optical
fibre for communications cables, while
Fig.15 shows a bundle of optical fibres
incorporated into an undersea communications cable.
Single-mode fibre is typically used
for long-distance communications
cables as it can support a longer distance (up to 50 times more than multimode) and a higher data rate. However, it is more expensive and requires
a light source with a narrow spectral
width. Multi-mode fibre is cheaper but
more suitable for short-to-
mediumrange applications.
The first undersea optical fibre
was TAT-8, a transatlantic cable that
opened in 1988 and retired in 2002. It
had a capacity of 280Mb/s, equivalent
to 4000 voice circuits. It contained two
working fibres plus a spare. TAT-8 had
repeaters every 67km.
Wavelength division multiplexing
(WDM) is used in modern cables to
increase the bandwidth by utilising
multiple laser wavelengths (colours),
up to 30, over a single fibre instead of
a single wavelength (see Fig.17). An
older optical fibre cable may be able
to be retrofitted with WDM terminal
equipment to increase its capacity.
Optical fibre repeaters (Fig.18) contain optical amplifiers and circuitry to
condition and reform the signal. DC
power to repeaters is provided via the
cable, usually between 3kV and 15kV.
The current for a 10kV supply might be
1.65A, meaning an incredible 16.5kW
of power is running through the cable.
One end of the cable is typically
supplied with a positive voltage, the
other with a negative voltage, resulting
in a virtual Earth in the middle of the
cable. The return current is through
the seawater.
A recent development (2021) is
NEC’s multicore fibre. This refers to
individual fibres that have four instead
of just one optical pathway (see Figs.20
& 19). This quadruples the number of
channels through an individual cable
compared to a conventional cable of
the same diameter.
Fig.17: the principle of wavelength division
multiplexing (WDM), as used on modern optical fibre
communications cables. A ‘mux’ is a multiplexer, while
a ‘demux’ is a demultiplexer.
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Silicon Chip
Fig.16: the structure of a typical
single-mode optical fibre. This is an
individual fibre with protection, not
a complete communications cable.
Original source: https://w.wiki/33S5
Information on the bandwidth of
modern optic fibre cables is hard to
come by. Still, the 6605km transatlantic MAREA cable with eight fibre
pairs (owned by Microsoft, Meta and
Telxius) is said to be rated at 224 terabits per second (224Tb/s). Google’s
15,000km West African Equiano cable
with 12 fibre pairs is said to carry
150Tb/s.
Modern fibre optic cables are
17-21mm in diameter, except on the
continental shelf (typically to a depth
of 1500m), where they are 40-50mm
due to additional armouring against
sea life and abrasion from storms etc.
Different cable configurations are possible depending on the level of protection needed; see Fig.21. Additional
protection may be provided by burying
the cable in shallower areas.
Reliability and redundancy
Communications cables and repeaters have to be very tough and strong to
withstand the bending of the cable as it
is loaded, then unloaded and installed.
Fig.18: an NEC repeater for the 9400km-long Trans-Asia
cable as it goes into the sea. Source: www.nec.com/en/case/
asia_direct_cable
Australia's electronics magazine
siliconchip.com.au
while Amazon is a major capacity
buyer or part owner of 4 cables. Many
of these cables are shown in Fig.1 (see
siliconchip.au/link/abzf).
Undersea cable manufacturers
Fig.19: an LW-series optical fibre cable
from OCC Corporation using 32 of
NEC’s multicore optical fibres. It is
17mm in diameter, designed for depths
up to 8km and can carry 15kV DC to
power repeaters. Source: www.occjp.
com/en/products/seabed/sc500.html
Consider the tensile loading from the
weight of several kilometres of cable as
it hangs from the ship (possibly during
rough seas) during laying and possible
retrieval for cable repairs.
The cable may be laid as deep as
8000m, such as in the Japan Trench,
where the pressure is 800 atmospheres
or 826kg/cm2. The temperature at the
bottom of the ocean is around 4°C.
Also, the cables have to be armoured
to protect against certain marine life.
Cables also have to be 100% reliable;
no one wants to have to retrieve a cable
that has a fault due to a quality control
failure. Cables typically have redundant components in the repeaters that
can be switched on if required, along
with one or more redundant fibres.
Who owns undersea cables?
Apart from telecommunications
companies and investors, about 1%
of cables are owned by government
entities.
The Big Tech giants, Amazon,
Alphabet (Google), Meta (Facebook)
and Microsoft, own or have interests
in many cables. After all, these companies are responsible for about 70%
of internet traffic combined. Their
business models rely on ample internet capacity.
Google owns 17 cables outright and
is part owner of an additional 16. Meta
(Facebook) is a part owner or major
capacity buyer in 15 cables and owns
one outright. Microsoft is a part owner
or major capacity buyer of 6 cables,
siliconchip.com.au
Companies that manufacture undersea cables include:
● SubCom LLC (www.subcom.com)
● Alcatel Submarine Networks
(www.asn.com)
● HMN Technologies Co Ltd (www.
hmntech.com)
● NEC (www.nec.com/en/global/
prod/nw/submarine)
Components are made by Corning, General Cable and Norddeutsche
Seekabelwerke.
Fig.20: regular optical fibre (left) and
NEC multicore optical fibre (right).
1000µm = 1mm. Original source:
NEC – siliconchip.au/link/abzd
Protection of cables by
international law
An international convention protects undersea cables: the Convention
for the Protection of Submarine Telegraph Cables. This was brought into
effect in 1884 and remains in force. It
makes it an offence to damage submarine cables and outlines who is responsible in the event of accidental damage. The Australian colonies signed in
1885 (SA, Vic), 1886 (Qld) and 1888
(NSW, Tas & WA).
Capacity metrics
Two capacity metrics are used for
optical communications cables. The
potential capacity is the theoretical
maximum capacity of a cable and is
what is usually cited in promotions.
There is also lit capacity, the capacity for which terminal equipment is
installed at either end.
When a cable is first put into service, the full capacity is not usually
utilised as demand does not yet exist.
Cable owners only install the amount
of expensive transmission equipment
needed at a given time. More is added
as demand increases until the potential capacity is reached.
Espionage
In December 2016 (siliconchip.au/
Article/10459), we mentioned Operation Ivy Bells, a US operation to tap
into a Soviet copper communications
cable during the Cold War. There
were undoubtedly many other such
instances from all parties. Modern
optical fibres are much harder to tap
into, and end-to-end encryption makes
intercepting and decoding communications very difficult.
Australia's electronics magazine
Fig.21: various possible configurations
of optical subsea communications
cables. Original source: ICPC –
siliconchip.au/link/abze
December 2024 21
Australia’s connections to
the world
Many cables connect Australia
to the world (and other parts
of Australia). We compiled the
following list showing the name
of each cable, its length and the
year it was or will be put into
service:
1995 Bass Strait-1 241km
1999 SeaMeWe-3 39,000km
2000 Southern Cross Cable
Network (SCCN) 30,500km
2001 Australia-Japan Cable
(AJC) 12,700km
2003 Bass Strait-2 239km
2005 Basslink 298km
2008
Gondwana-1 2151km
2008 Telstra Endeavour 9125km
2009 PIPE Pacific Cable-1
(PPC-1) 6900km
2016 North-West Cable System
2100km
2017 Tasman Global Access
(TGA) Cable 2288km
2018 Australia-Singapore Cable
(ASC) 4600km
2018 Hawaiki 14,000km
2019 INDIGO-Central 4850km
2019 INDIGO-West 4600km
2020 Coral Sea Cable System
(CS2) 4700km
2020 Japan-Guam-Australia
South (JGA-S) 7081km
2022 Oman Australia Cable
(OAC) 11,000km
2022 Southern Cross NEXT
13,700km
2023 Darwin-Jakarta-Singapore
Cable (DJSC) 1000km
2026 Honomoana unknown length
2026 Tabua unknown length
2026 Sydney-MelbourneAdelaide-Perth (SMAP) 5000km
2027 Asia Connect Cable-1
(ACC-1) 19,000km
2027 Hawaiki Nui 1 10,000km
2027 Te Waipounamu 3000km
TBD Umoja unknown length
22
Silicon Chip
It is possible to tap into optical fibres
by bending them and then examining
the light leakage at the bend. Depending on the cable, this may result in a
detectable reduction in light levels.
While encryption makes this less of a
concern, protections have been proposed to prevent it, such as using
‘bend-insensitive cable’ or a ‘quantum
alarm’ to detect it.
Deliberate damage – a major
vulnerability
With 99% of internet traffic travelling through undersea communications cables, and significant amounts
of electrical power for certain communities, nations are vulnerable to being
‘shut down’ very quickly by terrorist
or enemy military action.
There is no obvious practical way
to adequately protect such infrastructure; damage to one cable can take
weeks to repair under the best conditions. It would be virtually impossible
to repair multiple points of damage
on one or multiple cables in any reasonable time.
Hazardous areas might include
volcanic locations, hot water seeps,
areas prone to landslides and ecologically sensitive areas with deepwater coral etc. The location of where
cables come ashore is also carefully
considered.
Cables are carried by special ships
on giant spools. One example is the
Isaac Newton, shown in Fig.22. It can
carry a total of 11,900 tonnes of cable
on two spools, and can perform a variety of other functions.
A sea plough is used to bury the
cable to prevent damage in areas close
to shore – see Fig.23. There are about
60 cable installation and repair ships
in service worldwide.
Damage or faults
Undersea cables are periodically
damaged. Causes include underwater
landslides, earthquakes, volcanoes,
marine life, fishing trawlers (38%),
anchors (25%) and, closer to shore,
extreme storms, strong currents and
tsunamis.
Around 70% of optical cable damage occurs at depths under 200m.
Communications cable life
Cable faults were only responsible
Most cables have a design life of for about 6% of failures from 1959 to
about 25 years. However, many are 2006. Worldwide, about 100 incidents
retired early because their bandwidth of cable damage or faults are recorded
becomes inadequate and higher- per year.
capacity cables are more profitable to
Sharks have been known to attack
install. On occasion, unused cables unburied cables for unknown reasons,
might be raised and relocated to as shown in Fig.24. Because of this,
another location. This might be worth- cables have been provided with extra
while for countries or companies with
armour. However, the International
limited budgets.
Cable Protection Committee stated
Sometimes cables are recovered for there was no damage from the incithe valuable materials in them such dent shown in Fig.24.
as copper, aluminium, lead and steel.
They also wrote that sharks and
Collectors may go on diving expe- other fish were responsible for only
ditions to retrieve samples of cables 1% of cable faults until 2006 and none
of historic interest; for example, see since then (siliconchip.au/link/abz7).
http://w1tp.com/mcable.htm
In 1929, transatlantic telegraph
cables were cut within 100km of an
Cable costs & laying the cable
earthquake epicentre due to landCables cost upwards of US$25,000 slides.
($38,000) per kilometre, and recent
On the 30th of March 2016, 10 Africables have been in the price range of can countries were entirely off the
US$250-$300 million ($380-450 mil- internet for two days when a fishing
lion) for transatlantic and US$300- trawler inadvertently cut one cable.
$400 million ($450-600 million) for In 2019, Tonga’s cable was cut by a
trans-Pacific cables.
ship’s anchor.
During the planned routing of the
Then, in 2022, the cable connecting
cable, hazardous zones and ecologi- Tonga was cut for over a month due to
cally sensitive zones are avoided using the Hunga Tonga-Hunga Ha’apai volseabed mapping systems, such as mul- canic eruption. An earthquake on the
tibeam side-scan sonar (we covered 29th of June 2024 damaged it again.
sonar in June 2019; siliconchip.au/ Tonga has only limited satellite conArticle/11664).
nectivity and no backup cable.
Australia's electronics magazine
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.22: a cutaway
model of the cablelaying ship Isaac
Newton. Source:
https://w.wiki/AoEd
Sometimes, ‘accidental’ cable damage is deliberate. In 1959, a Soviet fishing trawler cut five US cables in 12
locations. And in 2021 a research cable
was severed off the coast of Norway by
a fishing vessel, see https://youtu.be/
pw2lO4sxZn8
Repairing faults
The location of cable breaks can be
determined by time-domain reflectometry (TDR). With TDR, pulses are sent
down the cable and reflections from
a cable break are timed. The location
of the break is determined by the time
taken as a fraction of the speed of light
in the cable. We published a DIY TDR
design in December 2014 (siliconchip.
au/Article/8121).
Once a fault is located, a cable repair
ship is dispatched to that location and
the cable is retrieved with a grapnel
(Fig.26) that hooks and locks onto
it, a process that sounds much easier than it really is. A damaged cable
is normally cut on the sea floor (if it
already isn’t cut), both ends retrieved,
and a new section added. Rejoining a
broken cable is a delicate process, as
shown in Fig.25.
What about Starlink?
Figures are hard to come by, but
one estimate by the US FCC suggests
that only 0.37% of their international
internet traffic goes via satellite. The
rest is by cable.
Starlink is a wonderful technology
that gives internet access to users and
devices anywhere in the world, but
it is unlikely to significantly relieve
the demand for undersea cable bandwidth.
The cost for a 60,000Gbps
9000km-long undersea cable with
a service life of 25 years is around
US$300 million (~$450 million) or
US$12 million (~$18 million) per year.
That gives a cost per Gbps per year of
around US$200 (~$300).
The cost for 10 Starlink v3 satellites
to cover roughly the same distance is
US$17 million (~$25 million), with
approximately 50Gbps bandwidth and
a service life of five years. That gives
a cost per year of just US$1.7 million
(~$2.6 million) but a cost per Gbps per
year of US$34,000 (~$52,000)!
So Starlink cannot compete with
undersea cables in terms of cost, but
that is not its purpose. Its purpose is to
offer internet service everywhere, provide an alternative to land-based ISPs,
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.23: a Soil Machine Dynamics sea cable plough on Normandy Beach, used to
bury cable. Source: https://x.com/MachinePix/status/623603135404187648
Fig.24: a shark attacking an
undersea cable as seen from a
remotely operated vehicle (ROV) – a
“megabite”? Source: https://youtu.
be/1ex7uTQf4bQ
Fig.25: the delicate process of
repairing a cable break (or making
a new join). Source: KIS-ORCA –
siliconchip.au/link/abzg
Fig.26: an ETA-brand ‘cut and hold’ grapnel to cut and retrieve cables from
the deepest parts of the ocean. There are many different designs of this type of
device. Source: https://eta-ltd.com/cut-hold-grapnel
Australia's electronics magazine
December 2024 23
How much does internet infrastructure weigh?
On the 21st of July 2024, ABC RN (Australia) rebroadcasted a BBC program in
which they tried to estimate the weight of all internet infrastructure, including
cables (siliconchip.au/link/abza). They concluded that subsea cables weighed
two million tonnes, while the total weight of all infrastructure was 92.5 million
tonnes. Naturally, that is a rough estimate.
and provide internet access in places
where free speech is compromised.
Other uses of
optical fibre cables
Active fibre optic cables can be used
for seismic measurements, as vibrations in the cable alter the scattering of
light in the fibre. Such measurements
generate 1Gb of data per minute (see
siliconchip.au/link/abz8).
The future
As more devices and consumers
(especially in developing countries)
are connected to the internet and existing consumers demand more bandwidth, it is expected that more and
more cable capacity will be required.
The demand for cable capacity will
only be slightly offset by increased satellite capacity, so demand for undersea cables will be strong.
Undersea power cables
While undersea communications
cables are the most prevalent, there
are also numerous undersea power
cables (see Fig.27). They typically
traverse much shorter distances than
data cables.
Numerous references mention the
installation of the first underwater
power cable in 1811 across the Isar
River in Bavaria. However, we could
not find an original source for this.
We did find evidence that in 1811,
Baron Pavel Lvovitch Schilling
devised a water-resistant electrical
wire that could be laid in wet earth or
rivers for the remote control of mines
or for telegraphy. It was coated with
natural rubber and varnish.
His first use of the wire in a river
was for “operations with a subaqueous galvanic conducting cord through
the river Neva, at St Petersburg, in the
year 1812” – see https://w.wiki/Akii
and https://w.wiki/Akij
AC/DC
Undersea power cables carry either
alternating or direct current. AC is
simpler because a transformer can
easily change voltages at either end
of the cable. DC transmission generally requires rectification at one end
to convert AC to DC to send through
the cable, then an inverter at the other
end to convert the DC to AC.
If the cable is used bi-directionally,
then inverter and rectifier equipment
is required at each end.
DC transmission is considerably
more complicated and expensive than
simply having a transformer because
it requires high-power, high-voltage
rectifiers and inverters. However, DC
transmission has the advantage of
lower energy losses for longer cable
runs.
That is because DC has no losses
from capacitance between conductors; with AC, this capacitance must
be charged and discharged twice per
cycle. For DC, that means less energy
is wasted as heat, and less conductor
material is needed. Also, there is no
skin effect with DC transmission, so
all of the conductor material is used to
carry current, not just the outer layer.
There is a maximum theoretical
length for AC power transmission
because, at some point, the entire
current capacity of the cable is used
to charge the remaining capacitance.
Of course, there are other cable length
limitations for both AC and DC cables.
For both AC and DC undersea
cables, there are greater losses and
usually greater expense than for overhead power lines. So undersea cables
are only used if there is no good alternative.
AC transmission is generally used
for shorter cable runs, while DC is used
for longer runs where the extra cost
is worthwhile due to reduced power
losses. However, DC systems are considered less reliable due to the complicated (and therefore failure-prone)
conversion equipment at either end.
Other sources of energy loss in
cables include:
Fig.27: a
cross-section
view of a
150kV 3-phase
undersea
power
(submarine)
cable. Source:
https://w.wiki/
ApBx
24
Silicon Chip
Australia's electronics magazine
siliconchip.com.au
● Ohmic power losses due to the
resistance of the conductor material,
which are proportional to the square
of the current and can be reduced by
using higher voltages (and thus lower
currents for the same power).
● Reactive power losses due to
capacitance between the conductors.
● Skin effect losses due to the concentration of alternating current near
the surface of a conductor, which can
be reduced with separately insulated,
stranded conductors.
● Power losses due to proximity
with other cables, avoided by spacing
cables widely apart.
● Sheath losses due to the generation of eddy currents in the protective
metal sheath (armour) around conductors within a cable.
● Leakage losses due to current
flowing through the dielectric (insulation) material.
DC cables can be configured as
monopolar or bipolar, as shown in
Fig.28, or another configuration, such
as series-connected. Monopolar configurations, with just one conductor
(either positive or negative) at a high
voltage, are the simplest and cheapest, but bipolar configurations provide
more flexibility and reliability.
For monopolar configurations,
return circuits can be through the
Earth, sea or a metallic return cable.
For bipolar configurations, one cable is
positive and the other negative, both at
high potential, with negligible return
current under normal circumstances.
If a fault occurs in one cable of a
Fig.28: two possible configurations
for HVDC cable systems, (a)
monopolar and (b) bipolar.
siliconchip.com.au
Fig.30: a
simplified
electrical
model
of HVAC
undersea
power
cables.
bipolar system, the other cable can
still be used but at 50% of the normal
current, with a return path through the
Earth, sea or a metallic return cable.
Electrically, an AC undersea power
cable can be considered as consisting of resistance, capacitance and an
inductive load, as shown in Fig.30.
Terminal stations provide additional
resistive and inductive loads.
The first high-capacity submarine
electrical cable, Gotland 1, was laid
in 1954. It was 98km long and went
from Gotland Island off Sweden to the
mainland, with a capacity of 20MW.
It carried 100kV DC and used mercury arc rectifiers to turn AC to DC,
then an inverter to convert the DC
into AC again. In 1970, the service was
upgraded to 150kV and 30MW using
thyristors for rectification.
The longest undersea power cables
in the world are North Sea Link
(720km, 515kV DC, 1.4GW), NorNed
(580km, 450kV DC, 700MW) and
SAPEI (420km, 500kV DC, 1000MW),
all in Europe, with Australia’s Basslink
the fourth-longest.
Basslink was featured in the
September 2008 issue (siliconchip.
au/Article/1943). It is a 290km (undersea section) 400kV DC 500MW cable
between Victoria and Tasmania. The
cable weighs 60kg/m. It is of monopole
configuration; Fig.29 shows a cross
section. It actually consists of three
separate cables bundled together with
polypropylene rope.
The bundle comprises the HVDC
cable, a return cable and a 12-core
fibre-optic cable for communications.
Since the return cable is at low potential, it has much less insulation (and
cost) than the power cable.
The proposed SingaporeLink cable
is 4300km long, has a 1.75GW power
rating at 525-640kV DC between Darwin and Singapore to connect intermittent solar and wind electricity generation in Australia with Singapore
(siliconchip.au/link/abz9).
If it goes ahead, it will be by far
the world’s longest undersea electricity cable. The cable would be made
in 20km lengths spliced into 200km
lengths. Some questions have been
raised over its technical and economic
SC
feasibility.
Fig.29: the configuration of the Basslink cable between Victoria and Tasmania.
Original source: https://tasmaniantimes.com/2016/11/what-is-your-view-onwhat-caused-the-basslink-failure
Australia's electronics magazine
December 2024 25
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