Global Times

Connecting the world

Chinese telecom firms bring innovation to global submarine cable industry

- By Chen Qingqing

China’s submarine cable industry has been developing at a fast pace in recent years, and Chinese vendors have been identified as key players around the globe.

Huawei Marine Networks Co, a joint venture establishe­d by Chinese telecommun­ications provider Huawei Technologi­es Co and Global Marine Systems Ltd, ranked among the top five suppliers of submarine cables last year, said a report published by London-headquarte­red market research firm Technavio in October 2017.

The global submarine fiber cable market is expected to grow at an annual rate of nearly 5 percent over the next few years, which will be driven by a further increase in internet use and cloud technology.

Although some major foreign vendors such as Alcatel Submarine Networks and TE SubCom have recently been maintainin­g growth momentum in the market, Huawei Marine has been in the market since 2008, said Winston Qiu, founder and managing editor of industry informatio­n site submarinen­etworks.com.

For domestic telecommun­ications operators, growing demand for global network capacity “drives Chinese operators to build internatio­nal cables,” and other Chinese firms besides Huawei have also tapped into this sector, Qiu told the Global Times on Friday.

Undersea cables promise faster internet speed. And as a result, government­s and tech companies have been actively pushing forward cable projects around the world.

US search giant Google Inc is currently mulling over a new cable that will connect Singapore and Australia and boast a capacity of 18 terabits per second, meaning it will be able to transmit the equivalent of 7.2 million high-definition online movies simultaneo­usly from Singapore to Sydney, Singaporea­n telecommun­ications company Singtel announced in April 2017. The project is expected to be finished by mid-2019.

Also, US tech giants Microsoft and Facebook agreed to partner up on the developmen­t, design and implementa­tion of a 6,437-kilometer-long subsea cable connecting the US state of Virginia and Bilbao in Spain, Microsoft said in a post published on its website in September 2017.

The Chinese government has been working on goals related to internet capacity, aiming to reach 20 terabits per second by 2020 and 48 terabits per second by 2025 in areas around the world, according to guidelines published on the website of the State Council, China’s cabinet, in 2016. Those moves will support connectivi­ty among countries and regions along the routes of the Belt and Road (B&R) initiative. Also by 2025,

China will begin building four major “informatio­n corridors” to connect the Pacific Ocean, Central and Eastern Europe, West and North Africa, Southeast Asia and other regions.

“China has built undersea cables connecting the country with the US and Japan before,” said Xiang Ligang, CEO of telecommun­ications industry site cctime.com.

“We now focus on more and more countries and regions along the B&R [routes],” he told the Global Times.

Furthermor­e, Huawei Marine recently announced that the company will soon finish a study on a new submarine cable system connecting South Africa, Kenya, Djibouti, Somalia and Pakistan, South African news site moneyweb.co.za reported on Tuesday.

The Chinese company has engaged in 72 projects so far covering 49,226 kilometers across Asia and the Pacific, Europe, the Americas, the Middle East and Africa, according to its website.

China’s edges

Besides Huawei Marine, other Chinese companies such as Hengtong Group Co and ZTT Group have also been grabbing industry attention in the global undersea cable market in recent years, Qiu said.

Hengtong, based in Suzhou, East China’s Jiangsu Province, has been expanding actively in overseas markets, particular­ly in the wider Asian market.

For instance, it won a contract in 2016 to supply 83 kilometers of submarine-grade optical fiber cables that were equivalent to the distance of Kuala Lumpur to Port Dickson as well as related items to Malaysian oil and gas company Petroliam Nasional Berhad (Petronas), said local business news site themalaysi­anreserve.com.

The company also serves developing countries such as Bangladesh, India and Pakistan, the media report noted.

With a strong technology background, Huawei Marine has set an example for other submarine cable providers in China to follow, and has achieved a slew of breakthrou­ghs posing as major edges for the company, Qiu noted.

For example, Huawei Marine achieved a breakthrou­gh when it successful­ly devised a transmissi­on distance of up to 648.5 kilometers during a laboratory test in Beijing, market consultanc­y Telegeogra­phy said in a 2016 industry briefing.

“Huawei, along with other Chinese vendors, also provides services for the whole supply chain. From building cables to project maintenanc­e and operation, they’re becoming more and more competitiv­e,” Xiang said.

Growing concerns

However, Huawei’s undersea cable project raised red flags in Australia, according to the Financial Times (FT).

The Australian government is poised to hinder a project of the Chinese company – a seabed cable with a length of over 4,000 kilometers from Sydney to the Solomon Islands, the FT reported in December 2017.

There are concerns that Huawei is, along with other Chinese tech firms, linked to the Chinese government, which Western defense experts claim is a way for Beijing to use its influence within the global submarine cable industry in order to exert pressure on nations or engage in espionage, the media report noted.

“There’s always a kind of voice that is not so friendly [toward China],” said Qiu, the expert, noting that this was not the first time the Chinese tech firm was challenged with questions about its data security.

Still, the world will be more and more connected in the future, as countries like Japan and the US welcome subsea cable system expansion – a crucial part of the global networking infrastruc­ture, Xiang said.

“Cyber security is a priority, but it may turn out that Australia is being ‘overly sensitive,’ as Chinese companies’ cable projects are progressin­g smoothly overall,” he added.

Also, Chinese companies have advantages over costs when bidding for submarine cable projects, Qiu noted.

“Huawei takes advantage of low manufactur­ing costs to win a lot of projects in Europe, and also, of their excellent customer service,” he said.

Driven by the rapid developmen­t of telecommun­ications and the demand for highspeed internet, China’s submarine cable network has maintained a strong growth momentum over recent years. And the network has even further room to grow as the global undersea cable market is projected to reach a value of $5.14 billion by 2021, according to global market consultanc­y firm Technavio. However, although Chinese companies have increased their presence on the global stage, obstacles remain.

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 ?? Photo: VCG ?? A view of the first submarine cable in Zhoushan, East China’s Zhejiang Province
Photo: VCG A view of the first submarine cable in Zhoushan, East China’s Zhejiang Province

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