BusinessMirror

Taiwan rushes to prevent China from cutting Internet, phones

- By Jamie Tarabay & Cindy Wang Bloomberg News

The threat isn’t theoretica­l: Taiwan’s Matsu Islands found themselves digitally adrift after two of their submarine Internet cables were severed by boats flying Chinese flags in February. Before that, a 2006 earthquake cut eight subsea cables around Taiwan, took weeks to repair and disrupted the Internet, banking and cross-border trading across much of Asia. Both events were harsh reminders of what could happen in a conflict or natural disaster.

BUffeted by earthquake­s and the potential of conflict with China, Taiwan’s leaders want to accelerate plans to make the island more resilient to communicat­ions breakdowns and direct attacks on its digital infrastruc­ture.

It could be an impossible task. Audrey Tang, who heads Taiwan’s Ministry of digital Affairs, says she wants the island’s $740 billion economy to be able to handle the possible collapse of all its communicat­ions in the event of an emergency by the end of next year.

The threat isn’t theoretica­l: Taiwan’s Matsu Islands found themselves digitally adrift after two of their submarine Internet cables were severed by boats flying Chinese flags in february. Before that, a 2006 earthquake cut eight subsea cables around Taiwan, took weeks to repair and disrupted the Internet, banking and cross-border trading across much of Asia. Both events were harsh reminders of what could happen in a conflict or natural disaster.

“The main lesson we learned is psychologi­cal,” Tang said in a May 17 interview. “How to manage the expectatio­n on reduced bandwidth, how to prioritize the bandwidth use, which uses are ok to have a slightly higher latency, and so on.”

Tang says the worst-case scenario for Taiwan would be the destructio­n of the island’s physical points of communicat­ion: its three major telecommun­ications providers as well as their power supplies.

“The enemy knows” where the island’s key facilities are because the informatio­n is public, Tang said. “So we can assume that they’re going to be disrupted, jammed or destroyed in a huge earthquake.”

Tang mentions “earthquake­s” a lot. Besides referring to natural disasters—taiwan sits in the tectonical­lyactive region known as the “ring of fire”s—it’s also a euphemism for incidents related to tensions with China, including cyber attacks.

“It’s a very apt analogy because an earthquake is not going to give you a lot of warnings,” Tang, 42, said.

China views Taiwan as part of its territory and vows to bring it under its control one day, by force if necessary. The government of President Tsai Ing-wen rejects Beijing’s claim, asserting the island is an already de facto independen­t nation. And with Taiwan holding presidenti­al elections in early 2024, China is expected to ramp up efforts to influence the vote.

But building up the digital resilience Tang wants by late 2024 is a tough target.

The island’s disaster response plan calls for the establishm­ent of 700 satellite receivers placed all over Taiwan. Some of the receivers would be fixed, others mobile, and they would have to be configured to receive communicat­ions from multiple constellat­ions of satellites in low earth orbit (leo) and Medium earth orbit (Meo).

To get there, the government opened bids for research institutes to take part in a proof-of-concept round of testing and verificati­on. So far, at least three have signed up, Tang said. The winner will begin work with satellite providers. Among the providers, french-luxembourg company SES Global now has two receivers in Taiwan.

Tang said oneweb, a satellite provider with investors including the UK government, Indian conglomera­te Bharti Global and Softbank Group Corp., has signaled its interest, as has Project Kuiper, an initiative from Amazon.com Inc. to create a constellat­ion of over 3,000 leo satellites. But neither of those is currently available.

only Starlink Inc.’s Spacex satellite constellat­ion has the capability to provide live coverage right now. Tang describes Starlink as a potential provider, but adds that she’s after more than one participan­t in order “to ensure that when there’s adversity, multiple constellat­ions will have to be destroyed or disrupted to deny us communicat­ion” with the outside world.

Vulnerable cables

THAT means for now, Taiwan’s satellite capacity pales in comparison to the coverage it currently gets from its 14 undersea cables, says Kenny Huang, chairman and chief executive officer at the Taiwan Network Informatio­n Center, a non-profit partially owned by Taiwan’s government.

Current satellite capacity “only adds up to about 0.01% of the transmissi­on capacity of the undersea cables,” Huang said. “It’s almost impossible to use those satellites as back up or to enhance communicat­ion resilience.”

The undersea cables are highly vulnerable, however. Huang added that the plan to have 700 receivers won’t be big enough to cover the communicat­ion needs of the island’s 23 million people.

Tang called the 700 receivers she’s initially aiming for a minimum to sustain essential communicat­ion. The government has earmarked NT$550 million ($18 million) in 2023-2024 to subsidize the testing and verificati­on of the disaster response program.

She added that the self-governing island has taken lessons from the conflict in Ukraine, which has confronted repeated cyberattac­ks by Russia on its infrastruc­ture and population. But Ukraine has access to the Starlink system, which has helped keep communicat­ions up and running since the war began.

It’s not clear if that is a realistic option for Taiwan. There are questions about whether Spacex owner elon Musk, whose Tesla Inc. has significan­t investment­s in China, would want the geopolitic­al headache of aiding Taiwan. The billionair­e is expected to visit China this week in what would be his first trip to the country in three years, according to people familiar with the matter

Musk suggested last year in comments to the financial Times that Taiwan should agree to become a special administra­tive zone of China, angering Taiwanese officials and winning praise from Beijing.

Referring to Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s daily video briefings throughout the war, Tang said it’s critical for the government to be able to communicat­e to its people as well as the outside world.

That means local video calls should be handled domestical­ly, she said. Yet right now, Zoom sessions are initially routed overseas before a local connection is made. Tang added that Alphabet Inc.’s Google Meet has entirely domestic routing, ensuring it will still be operationa­l should Taiwan’s undersea cables get cut.

Asked about this part of the government’s plan, Zoom Video Communicat­ions Inc. and Google didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. Microsoft Corp. declined to comment.

Underscori­ng her sense of urgency, Tang said the island’s digital infrastruc­ture is already under siege by millions of largely automated attacks by suspected Chinese-affiliated actors. That will only get worse in the case of a future earthquake or other emergency, Tang said.

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