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Japan, the United States and Australia have announced financing support for an undersea cable connecting the Pacific island nation of Palau
.
According to reports, the submarine cable will branch out of the trans-Pacific ECHO submarine cable, which is designed to connect the continental United States with Singapore
.
The 170-kilometer-long branch is expected to begin deployment in 2021 at a total cost of about $30 million
.
The U.
S
.
Department of the Interior has approved $7 million in grant assistance to support the project.
Meanwhile, USAID, Australia's Pacific Infrastructure Financing Agency and the Japan Bank for International Cooperation, in partnership with the Republic of Palau, will provide additional support
.
More than 90% of the world's international communications are conducted
through submarine fiber optic cables.
But cables in the South Pacific are few and far apart compared to the connection between Japan and the United States in the North Pacific
.
With the spread of IoT and 5G wireless communications, the amount of data on the South Pacific route is expected to multiply, which requires increasing the capacity
of submarine cables.
Japan, the United States and Australia have announced financing support for an undersea cable connecting the Pacific island nation of Palau
.
According to reports, the submarine cable will branch out of the trans-Pacific ECHO submarine cable, which is designed to connect the continental United States with Singapore
.
The 170-kilometer-long branch is expected to begin deployment in 2021 at a total cost of about $30 million
.
The U.
S
.
Department of the Interior has approved $7 million in grant assistance to support the project.
Meanwhile, USAID, Australia's Pacific Infrastructure Financing Agency and the Japan Bank for International Cooperation, in partnership with the Republic of Palau, will provide additional support
.
More than 90% of the world's international communications are conducted
through submarine fiber optic cables.
But cables in the South Pacific are few and far apart compared to the connection between Japan and the United States in the North Pacific
.
With the spread of IoT and 5G wireless communications, the amount of data on the South Pacific route is expected to multiply, which requires increasing the capacity
of submarine cables.