GO to embark on submarine infrastructure to connect Malta to France and north eastern Africa
Barely a week after the unprecedented outage following an unrelated, simultaneous power down on GO’s two submarine cables, GO announced a multi-million Euro investment in a third new submarine cable system. This bold move by GO will reshape Malta’s international connectivity to the rest of the world. Unlike all current submarine cables, this new system will branch out into a dual connection. This means that for the first time in telecoms history in Malta, the country will have an international high-speed fibre connection towards both the
“Western and Eastern part of the Mediterranean.
Once completed, the new system will connect Malta to Marseille, thus bypassing the traditional connection to mainland Italy, as well as to Egypt. As a leader in its field, The diversity of this investment
GO is once again also lies in the fact that contrary to all current submarine cables responding to the that connect Malta from the East country’s need for a coast of the island, this new system more robust
” will be the only cable that telecommunications provides international connectivity
infrastructure from the West coast. Works on the production of the cable, as well as critical preparations on the local physical infrastructure are already underway.
Last week’s circumstances, which impacted all GO’s internet services, both fixed and mobile internet services, international hundreds of employees to attend voice calls, roaming services, as to the sudden technical circumstances well as certain dedicated business and restore GO’s services services, were described by GO in the shortest time possible. as “extreme and extraordinary” GO currently operates two international to the extent that the company submarine cables that felt duty bound to cancel its annual connect Malta to Sicily, both designed Christmas staff party for its to provide redundancy in 800+ workforce and mobilise the event that one of the submarine cable systems is out of service and if one cable is out of service, all protected traffic is carried on the other cable system automatically. Coincidentally, the second submarine cable named GO-1 which lands in the West side of Sicily was inaugurated just over ten years ago, in 2008. This new investment in a third submarine cable will take redundancy for Maltese businesses and customers to a complete new level, and once completed, will heavily reduce the risk of a last weeks’ events reoccurring.
“As a leader in its field, GO is once again responding to the country’s need for a more robust telecommunications infrastructure. This multi-million euro investment will promote Malta as the absolute Mediterranean hub for telecommunications and business. GO continues to be an active player and one of the largest investors in the country’s economic journey,” said Nikhil Patil, CEO, GO plc.