Facebook's New Pacific Cable ORCA

Facebook is building a six fibre pair cable directly connecting Taiwan to the the United States with landings at Toucheng, Taiwan, Hermosa Beach, California, and Manchester, California. RFS is 2Q2027. The Hermosa Beach CLS is the well known facility built by RTI Holdings before its bankruptcy. In the submarine cable landing license application, Facebook noted that its motivation was the fact that US-Taiwanese traffic is growing rapidly each year. Due to the 12,000 kilometer length of the cable and the absence of any island landings for power, the design throughput per pair is a relatively low 12.8 Tbps or 76.8 Tbps aggregate initial capacity. 

ORCA is an open cable so each fibre pair owner will operate and control its own submarine line terminating equipment with only power being under collective control. Since Facebook is the cable's sole initial owner, the open architecture suggests it will sell capacity on the system to third parties to recoup capital expenditures and share common operating costs like maintenance costs and power. I believe the branching architecture serves as a way to improve resiliency. Each branch has six fibre pairs just like the main trunk. This enables all the traffic on a down branch to be rerouted to the surviving branch. The branching has optical fibre pair switching built into it. 

Map of Facebook's New ORCA Subsea Cable



Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Breaking Story: Facebook Building Subsea Cable That Will Encompass The World

Facebook's Semi-Secret W Cable

How To Calculate An IRU Price For a 100G Wavelength