Underappreciated Atlantic Cable Systems: Amitié & TGN Atlantic South
Underappreciated Atlantic Cable Systems: Amitié & TGN Atlantic South
Tran-Atlantic
Internet traffic tends to flow from Secaucus Equinix and Ashburn
Equinix to Slough Equinix and Paris and vice versa. Madrid and Portugal
are becoming important telecom hubs as well. The most logical choices
for Ashburn Equinix to Continental Europe waves are the Marea and Dunant
cables. These SDM systems provide welcomed physical diversity by
bypassing the UK.
But there is also
huge traffic between Secaucus and Slough Equinix. If you are a Speed
Freak high frequency trader, then EXA's Express is probably the way to
go. But if you need something economical with reasonable diversity to
most other subsea cables and rock solid up time, then you must consider
TATA's four fibre pair Atlantic South cable that lands in New Jersey and
Highbridge, UK. Pricing is competitive and its landing is diverse to
the poplar Bude, UK landing where nine cables land. From what I can tell
TGN back haul to Slough should have little overlap with the Bude
cables, which generally traverse Bristol, Oxford, and then hit Slough,
UK.
Due to an NDA, I hesitate to
provide exact details, but I can say that the TGN South Atlantic's wet
segment has been continuously up for at least last 4 years. It is an
astonishingly good network performance. Tyco Electronics acquired
AT&T's legendary submarine cable division in 1998. TE built TGN
Atlantic as part of a platinum plated global network that it intended to
keep as a TE subsidiary, but which TATA picked up in 2005 for pennies.
TE built cables to very high standards including unique cable landings,
dedicated cable landing stations, and even bore pipes from the beach
manhole to the open sea through which the fibre was threaded. I believe
it was the perfectionism of the submarine construction group that
explains the outstanding up time. Note that cable longevity is inversely
proportional to the number of faults requiring splicing. The fewer the
repair splices, the longer the cable will last as optical loss
accumulates more slowly. It reminds me of my real estate business where
expensive high quality renovations have proven cheap long term due to
the work's longevity.
Most
Tier 2 ISPs still do not diversify enough on the Atlantic. Landings are
still concentrated at Virginia Beach and in the NYC metro area. A
relatively new cable that provides some physical diversity relief is
Orange's Amitié. It lands in Lynn, Massachusetts, a suburb just above
city of Boston. It uses the original Hibernia Atlantic cable landing
station, which I visited in 2006, now part of EXA Infrastructure. Amitié
also lands at Bude where it is housed in one of the Vodafone cable
landing stations. The cable's strength is that it shortens latency for
traffic destined and originating from the US Northeast and also Canada.
It is also diverse to the NYC area subsea cables used to bring traffic
to Secaucus Equinix. Amitié and TGN South Atlantic are good complements
for UK destined traffic.
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