AVAROA CABLE LIMITED PRESS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
GROUND BREAKING CEREMONY FOR MANATUA’S CABLE LANDING STATION IN RAROTONGA
Cable’s backers join together for ground breaking ceremony
Cable landing stations will provide gateway to new international cable
5 NOVEMBER 2019
Aro’a, Rarotonga, Cook Islands
Those behind the Cook Islands involvement in the Manatua One Polynesia Submarine Cable project gathered in Aro’a,
Rarotonga to mark the ground-breaking for Manatua’s Rarotonga Cable Landing Station. Government of the Cook Islands
Deputy Prime Minister Mark Brown was joined by Avaroa Cable Ltd, the government owned company responsible for building
and operating the cable, and representatives of the New Zealand Government and the Asian Development Bank, who are both
supporting the project. Kaena Mataiapo Tutara of Aro’a Puaikura also attended.
The new cable landing station will provide the gateway for connectivity for both Rarotonga and Aitutaki through the
3700km cable and on to the rest of the world. It will house multi-million dollar state-of-the-art telecommunications
transmission equipment sending and receiving digital communications at up to 10Tbps (=10,000,000Mbps) using lasers and
“coherent modulation” over the optical fibre. The secure facility will also monitor the performance of the cable in real
time and be equipped with back-up power capabilities.
Tauturu Orometua John Andrews conducted a blessing ahead of work which will start immediately to clear the Aro’a site
and construct foundations for the advanced facility, currently en route from the factory in Perth, Australia. The
construction of a sister station in Aitutaki will also commence shortly.
The cable landing station is expected to be ready for operational service in February 2020, in time to allow the entire
Manatua cable and its six landings across Polynesia to be commissioned.
Completion of the Trans Polynesian Information Superhighway is on target to be ready for service in June 2020.
Cook Islands Government Deputy Prime Minister Mark Brown said: “The new cable is vital to our economy. It will enable us to engage fully with the rest of the world in a vast array of
new and powerful ways. Today is another exciting step closer to our goal and an important milestone for this critical
project.”
Dr Ranulf Scarbrough, ACL CEO and Vice Chair of the Manatua Cable Consortium said: “Manatua’s Rarotonga Cable Landing Station is a hugely important element of the Manatua Cable system. It will provide
Rarotonga and Aitutaki with an international gateway and will be the hub of ACLs efforts to supercharge the connectivity
of Rarotonga and Aitutaki for many years to come.”
ENDS