SEA-ME-WE 5 submarine cable backers announce landings

March 7, 2016
The deployment of the SEA-ME-WE 5 (South East Asia-Middle East-Western Europe 5) submarine cable, which its backers expect will become operational in the second half of this year, is making progress with the recent announcements of a pair of landings.

The deployment of the SEA-ME-WE 5 (South East Asia-Middle East-Western Europe 5) submarine cable, which its backers expect will become operational in the second half of this year, is making progress with the recent announcements of a pair of landings.

Orange has announced a landing at la Seyne-sur-Mer in the south of France. Djibouti Telecom, meanwhile, has announce completion of landing work in Haramous.

The 20,000 km-long undersea cable system will run from France to Singapore, serving 17 countries: Saudi Arabia, Bangladesh, Egypt, United Arab Emirates, France, Indonesia, Italy, Malaysia, Myanmar, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Republic of Djibouti , Singapore, Sri Lanka, Turkey and Yemen. Orange Group subsidiary Orange Marine is managing the installation of the submarine network in the Mediterranean, where it is expected to land in France, Egypt, Italy, and Turkey.

Alcatel-Lucent Submarine Networks (now a subsidiary of Nokia) and NEC share responsibility for the actual deployment work (see "SEA-ME-WE 5 consortium issues construction contracts").

The submarine fiber-optic network will support 100-Gbps wavelengths with a total system capacity of 24 Tbps over three fiber pairs.

In addition to Orange and Djibouti Telecom, SEA-ME-WE-5's backers include Bangladesh Submarine Cable Co. Ltd., (BSCCL), China Mobile International, China Telecom Global, China United Network Communications Group Co., Emirates Integrated Telecommunications Co. (PJSC), Myanma Posts and Telecommunications, Saudi Telecom Co., SingTel, Sri Lanka Telecom, TOT, PT Telekomunikasi Indonesia International, Telecom Italia Sparkle, Telekom Malaysia Berhad, and Yemen International Telecommunications (TeleYemen).

A consortium of three banks – the French Development Agency (AFD), the Islamic Development Bank (IDB), and the Djibouti BCI–BRED – have provided the necessary funding.

Orange says it will connect SEA-ME-WE-5 through the cable landing station at la Seyne-sur-Mer to the Interxion Data Center in Marseille (MRS1).

For more information on high-speed transmission systems and suppliers, visit the Lightwave Buyer's Guide.


Sponsored Recommendations

AI and Network Convergence: Transforming Global Connectivity

March 7, 2025
In today’s hyperconnected world, rolling out and managing profitable, high-performance networks for access and transport will require innovative architectural approaches. The ...

Transforming the metro network and the evolution of the "Digital Service Provider"

March 4, 2025
Join experts at EXFO and Ekinops in this webinar that will review the evolving metro-centric requirements and the technologies emerging to meet them.

Unveiling the Synergy Between AI and Optical Networking

March 12, 2025
Join us for an engaging discussion with industry experts on the intersection of AI and optics. Moderated by Sean Buckley, editor-in-chief of Lightwave+BTR, this panel will explore...

ON TOPIC: Filling Coverage Gaps, Enhancing Public Safety

Jan. 30, 2025
With the ongoing drive to support AI and the need for high-speed data center interconnection, the call for higher-speed 800G optical technology is emerging. Initially focused ...