Telstra’s new submarine cable lands in Sydney

9 Apr 2008

Telstra and Alcatel-Lucent have demonstrated a new 9,000km submarine cable that will dramatically increase internet capacity between Australia and the US. The new cable, which will be landed at Tamarama Beach in Sydney this week, can be scaled up to 1.28Tbps capacity between the two countries. At full capacity, the cable is capable of carrying 160,000 concurrent high definition television channels. ‘The explosion of user-generated online content means we need more capacity than ever before with the United States, which is already the destination for two-thirds of all Australian traffic on the internet,’ Kate McKenzie, Group Managing Director, Telstra Wholesale, said. ‘This cable is the largest ever built and owned by an Australian company. It’s another example of Telstra investing to ensure Australia can enjoy the health care, education and productivity benefits made possible by high speed broadband technology,’ she added.

Alcatel-Lucent began laying the cable between Sydney and Hawaii earlier this year. Work will continue to lay the cable across the Pacific Ocean to Hawaii, and the cable will be operational by the end of 2008. From Hawaii the cable will interconnect with the new Asia America Gateway cable and other existing cables providing direct access to the mainland United States.

Australia, Telstra,

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