Cable type | Fibre-optic |
---|---|
Area served | East Asia, United States |
TPE or Trans-Pacific Express is a submarine telecommunications cable linking China, South Korea, Taiwan, Japan, and the United States. The line is a US$500 million joint venture between 6 telecommunication companies China Telecom, China Netcom, China Unicom, Chunghwa Telecom, Korea Telecom, and Verizon Communications (AT&T and NTT joined in March 2008).[1][2] Ownership of the cable is evenly split between the 6 participants. Construction of this 11,000 miles (approx. 17,700 km) line was completed in September 2008,[3] and the Japan branch was completed in January 2010.[4]
At the time of its construction, 5,547 gigabits per second of capacity was available across the Atlantic Ocean, but only 2,726 gigabits per second existed across the Pacific Ocean.[2] Most links to China had to go through a hub in Japan, and access topped out at 155 Mbit/s.[5] The TPE is more than 60 times the overall capacity of the existing cable directly linking the U.S. and China, and thus its construction was a major enhancement to the cable systems between the two nations.[6] It is the first next-generation undersea optical cable system directly linking the U.S. and China,[7] and was also the first major undersea system to land on the U.S. West Coast in more than seven years.[8] Initially, the Trans-Pacific Express cable was configured to handle traffic at 1.28 terabits per second (Tbit/s), but the system has a design capacity of up to 5.12 Tbit/s. Customers can also book individual connections running at 10 Gbit/s.[2]
Landing Points
The landing points of the cable are located in:
- Chongming, Shanghai Municipality, China
- Qingdao, Shandong Province, China
- Maruyama, Chiba, Japan
- Geoje, South Gyeongsang Province, South Korea
- Tamsui, New Taipei City, Taiwan (ROC)
- Nedonna Beach, Oregon, United States
References
- ↑ "AT&T;, NTT join TPE Consortium". Archived from the original on 2008-07-25. Retrieved 2008-08-13.
- 1 2 3 Trans-Pacific Express deal signed for US-China cable: CommsUpdate : TeleGeography Research
- ↑ Verizon, KT, 4 Others Complete Rollout Of Trans-Pacific Cable Archived 2008-10-03 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ Verizon: New Trans-Pacific Express submarine cable landing in Japan increases capacity, adds network diversity
- ↑ Verizon Business building $500 million terabit cable to China - Network World Archived 2008-02-13 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ dailywireless.org » New China Transpacific Cable
- ↑ Trans-Pacific Express Approved To Land In U.S. - MarketAvenue
- ↑ Trans-Pacific Express submarine cable system gets FCC approval - Engadget