Dawn Of A New Technological Age For New Zealand
Telecom Chief Executive Theresa Gattung today heralded the lighting up of the NZ$2.2 billion Southern Cross submarine cable as a great day for New Zealand.
Ngati Whatua hosted a moving dawn ceremony this morning on Auckland's Takapuna Beach, to commemorate the event and mark the dawning of a new technological age for New Zealand.
"The completion of the Southern Cross Cable ensures that New Zealand businesses and communities can continue to develop the economic and social possibilities created by the global online revolution," Ms Gattung said.
"New Zealand businesses - big or small, selling services or products - can contribute to the national export drive by going online. The bandwidth provided by the Southern Cross cable is integral to enabling New Zealand businesses to operate in the New Economy and to go directly to markets vastly larger than our own.
"E-commerce and the Internet are at the core of the new business environment and central to this is the surging demand for bandwidth Southern Cross will provide.
"While it seems patently obvious today, five years ago it took visionaries at Telecom to make an entrepreneurial decision that required real guts and foresight. We committed more than $NZ1 billion to a project that would yield an up to 120-fold increase in the capacity available through the existing PacRim East cable network.
"Telecom's 50% share in the 30,500 km Southern Cross cable project represents New Zealand's biggest corporate investment and is also a unique international venture between Telecom and the other cable owners, Cable and Wireless Optus (40%) and MCI Worldcom (10%).
"Telecom's Southern Cross cable investment is a great example of making the digital revolution a reality for our country. The Southern Cross Cable will bring people closer together on both sides of the Tasman, in the United States and beyond to communicate, learn and be entertained," Ms Gattung said.
SOUTHERN CROSS FACT SHEET
The Southern Cross cable network is 30,500
kilometres in length
500 repeaters are placed
along the length of the cable at intervals of 40-70km to
"boost" the optical signals
The cable is based
on optical fibres, set in a steel tube and coated in jelly
to protect them from water penetration and hydrogen. This is
protected by high-strength steel and surrounded in
seam-welded copper to form the composite conductor.
Additional layers of galvanised steel wires are incorporated
in the cable where necessary to protect the cable on the
ocean floor
For most of the cable's length it
is only 18 mm in diameter
The maximum depth the
cable is laid at is 7685 metres between Takapuna Beach and
Hawaii
At the core of the cable, up to eight
strands of glass, each less than the width of a human hair,
carry enough traffic to allow for every man, woman and child
in New Zealand to simultaneously make a phone call across
the cable with plenty of capacity to spare
The
cable and associated equipment was manufactured at Alcatel
and Fujitsu plants in Australia, Japan, France, Italy and
the United States
The network is capable of
operating at 120Gbit/s between Australasia and the United
States, and across the Tasman
Wherever
feasible, the cable is plough buried in depths of less than
2000 metres. For the remainder of the cable's journey, the
cable lies on the seabed.
The Southern Cross
cable's availability is designed to be better than 99.999%.
This equates to a maximum of 50 minutes of network down-time
every 10 years