Facebook And Google Connecting The USA Directly To Singapore And Indonesia Using Submarine Cables

Facebook is planning two new submarine cables between the US west coast, Singapore, and Indonesia, a rapidly growing region in the Asian economy.

As Facebook announced on March 28, 2021, in its engineering blog, the submarine cables will be named Echo and Bifrost.

The project must first be approved by the authorities in the US, which is made much more difficult by the economic war between the US and China.

Nothing has yet been announced about the capacity and transmission technology of the submarine cables. “These will be the first transpacific submarine cables on this new route to cross the Java Sea, increasing total transpacific capacity by 70 percent,” said Facebook.

Facebook also did not provide any information on the investments. Google says it has a stake in Echo, one of the two submarine cables. “Echo will be the first submarine cable to connect the US directly to Singapore via an express route with direct fiber pairs, reducing latency for users connecting to applications where Google Cloud Platform (GCP) is one of the most dynamic Financial and technology centers of the world is used, ” explained Google.

According to Facebook, partners include Indonesian companies Telin and XL Axiata, as well as Singapore-based Keppel. Kevin Salvadori, Facebook’s vice president of network investments, shared more details in an interview with Reuters. He said the Echo is being built in partnership with Google and Alphabet’s XL Axiata and should be completed by 2023.

According to a statement by Keppel, Bifrost is over 15,000 kilometers in length. Its share in the total project costs of the Bifrost cable system will amount to around $350 million.

Avinash A
Meet Avinash, a tech editor with a Master's in Computer Science and a passion for futuristic tech, AI, and Machine Learning. Known for making complex tech easy to understand, he's a respected voice in leading tech publications and podcasts. When he's not deciphering the latest AI trends, Avinash indulges in building robots and dreaming up the next big tech breakthrough.

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