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Caribbean submarine cable system operators ARCOS-1 USA and A.
SurNet (ASN) have submitted an application to the U.
S.
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to modify their cable landing permits
for the ARCOS-1 submarine cable system connecting the United States with 14 countries.
The 8,700-kilometer submarine cable crosses the Caribbean Sea, connecting North, Central and South America, and has a new authorized landing site
in Cojimar, Cuba.
According to the plan, a new path will be deployed from the existing branch path of the ARCOS-1 cable, located about 56 kilometers off the coast of Cuba, by section
26 of the ARCOS-1 cable.
The Cuban Telecommunications Company (ETECSA) will provide the Cable Landing Station (CLS), which will be updated and installed with telecommunications equipment to operate paragraph
26.
Columbus Networks Inc.
CNL will be the landing party to Cuba, and CNL will jointly own and operate this new landing station
by CNL and a number of ARCOS Alliance members.
In addition, ETECSA will receive the irrevocable right to use (IRU)
for part 26 capacity from CNL.
CNL will award a tender to an international submarine cable supplier to complete the construction
of Section 26 of the submarine cable system.
The Americas Regional Caribbean Ring System (ARCOS-1) is an 8,700-kilometer-long submarine fiber-optic communications cable connecting the United States, the Bahamas, the Turks and Caicos Islands, the Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico, Curacao, Venezuela, Colombia, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras, Guatemala, Belize and Mexico
.
Caribbean submarine cable system operators ARCOS-1 USA and A.
SurNet (ASN) have submitted an application to the U.
S.
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to modify their cable landing permits
for the ARCOS-1 submarine cable system connecting the United States with 14 countries.
The 8,700-kilometer submarine cable crosses the Caribbean Sea, connecting North, Central and South America, and has a new authorized landing site
in Cojimar, Cuba.
According to the plan, a new path will be deployed from the existing branch path of the ARCOS-1 cable, located about 56 kilometers off the coast of Cuba, by section
26 of the ARCOS-1 cable.
The Cuban Telecommunications Company (ETECSA) will provide the Cable Landing Station (CLS), which will be updated and installed with telecommunications equipment to operate paragraph
26.
Columbus Networks Inc.
CNL will be the landing party to Cuba, and CNL will jointly own and operate this new landing station
by CNL and a number of ARCOS Alliance members.
In addition, ETECSA will receive the irrevocable right to use (IRU)
for part 26 capacity from CNL.
CNL will award a tender to an international submarine cable supplier to complete the construction
of Section 26 of the submarine cable system.
The Americas Regional Caribbean Ring System (ARCOS-1) is an 8,700-kilometer-long submarine fiber-optic communications cable connecting the United States, the Bahamas, the Turks and Caicos Islands, the Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico, Curacao, Venezuela, Colombia, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Honduras, Guatemala, Belize and Mexico
.