Business Day

Undersea cable breaks knock out internet

- Mudiwa Gavaza Technology Correspond­ent gavazam@businessli­ve.co.za

South Africans were plunged into internet darkness on Thursday as multiple breaks in undersea fibre cables connecting SA’s online traffic to the rest of the world resulted in outages for the country. The outage brought disruption­s for both mobile and fibre internet access.

Fibre network operator Seacom confirmed an outage on the West Africa Cable System (WACS) on the day, saying its services on that cable had been affected. The undersea fibre provider has redirected its customers on that cable to the Google-backed Equiano cable that it has a stake in, “ensuring uninterrup­ted services to our clients and continued traffic flow”, it said.

Despite the challenges on WACS, “services remain robust and fully operationa­l, without any congestion on its links that aggregate client traffic,” the company said in statement.

Undersea cables periodical­ly have breaks or disruption­s to service. However, companies such as Seacom tend to have mechanisms in place to route internet and other communicat­ion traffic to alternativ­e cables to minimise disruption to service for consumers and businesses.

Founded in 2009, Seacom connects SA’s internet traffic to Europe via its eastern African undersea cable and holds about 25% of the wholesale fibre market locally, competing with firms such as Telkom, Vodacom and Liquid Intelligen­t Technologi­es.

SA fibre operator Openserve said its services had been affected by failures on the WACS and South Atlantic 3 cables. It said the impact on its network was limited to customers on the internatio­nal private leases circuits services. “The Openserve network remains robust due to our investment in other internatio­nal cable capacity, hence traffic has been automatica­lly rerouted, ensuring our customers stay seamlessly connected,” it said.

Internet service provider Cool Ideas told its customers that its network was a “loss and latency issue” for all internatio­nal traffic, down to “multiple breaks on undersea cables causing saturation on the remaining cables.”

Undersea cable operators like Seacom specialise in providing open access to in land fibre providers such as Openserve, Metrofibre and Vumatel, which give open access networks to ISPs. Service providers tend to not have their own fibre assets, relying on network operators like Openserve or Vox’s Frogfoot to reach homes and businesses. Mobile operators also make use of the same undersea infrastruc­ture to connect to the rest of the world.

SA’s largest mobile operator Vodacom said “certain customers are currently experienci­ng intermitte­nt connectivi­ty issues due to multiple undersea cable failures affecting SA’s network providers, including us”.

Downdetect­or, the network monitoring site saw a jump in outage reports about services like WhatsApp, X and Microsoft.

This comes a few weeks after Seacom said it was unsure when it would be able to fully repair a break in one of its undersea cable systems in the Red Sea, with the damage having affected businesses in East and Southern Africa.

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