GPS News  
New Damage And Bad Weather Delay Asian Internet Repairs

Currently nearly 95 percent of the Taiwan's telecommunications capacity has been restored although access to some foreign websites remains slightly slow. Photo courtesy AFP.
by Staff Writers
Taipei (AFP) Jan 23, 2007
Newly discovered earthquake damage to undersea cables and bad weather could delay the complete restoration of Asian Internet services until next month, telecom officials said last week. A spokesman for Taiwan's Chunghwa Telecom said engineers had found new damage to cables servicing China, putting back repairs by about a week.

"As we are short of direct transportation between Taiwan and the mainland, it will take four or five days to transport the needed cables from the mainland via a third place," a company official told AFP.

The official said he expected repair work on the cables, damaged by a powerful 7.1-magnitude earthquake on December 26, to be finished by the end of January.

"But I cannot say for sure because bad weather may hamper the continued work. It may add uncertainty to the work," he said.

Hong Kong officials also warned that poor weather could delay repairs well into next month.

"Due to inclement weather conditions and the extensive nature of the damages caused by the earthquakes, the latest status is that the first stage of the repairing work of the damaged submarine cable systems is expected to be completed within the second half of this month," the Office of Telecommunications Authority said in a statement.

It said the rest of the repairs would be completed by the middle of February, if weather permits.

The Boxing Day earthquake snapped several international telecom cables, sparking widespread communications disruption in Taiwan, China, Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore, South Korea and elsewhere. Knock-on problems occurred as far away as Australia.

Phone calls and Internet connections across the Asia-Pacific region were affected by the quake, which rocked left two people dead and at least 42 injured in Taiwan.

The epicenter was 10 kilometres (six miles) under the sea, 57 miles from Taiwan's southern city of Kaohsiung.

Eight repair boats have been sent to the waters between Hong Kong and Taiwan to tackle the complicated task of fixing the damaged fibre-optic cables, the Chunghwa official said.

Currently nearly 95 percent of the Taiwan's telecommunications capacity has been restored although access to some foreign websites remains slightly slow, he said.

Hong Kong's telecoms authority said major Internet service providers have recovered about 80 percent of their international connection capacity.

In China, web access has remained sluggish compared to before the earthquake.

Source: Agence France-Presse

Related Links
Satellite-based Internet technlogies
Bring Order To A World Of Disasters
Satellite-based Internet technologies



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Asia Turns To Time-Tested Solution For Damaged Internet Cables
Singapore (AFP) Jan 12, 2007
Workers are relying on 19th century technology to fix a very 21st century problem -- disruption of the Internet traffic that tech-savvy Asia relies on. Crewmen on boats south of Taiwan are dragging the seabed with grappling hooks at the end of long ropes to recover fibre optic cables damaged in a 7.1-magnitude earthquake that struck the region on December 26.







  • Lockheed Martin And Boeing Form Strategic Alliance To Promote Next-Gen Air Transportation System
  • Time to test the Guardian Missile Defense System For Commercial Aircraft
  • Operational Testing And Evaluation Of Guardian Commercial Airline Anti-Missile System Begins
  • USGS Examines Environmental Impacts Of Aircraft De-Icers

  • Split Over CO2 Limits For New Cars As EU Postpones Decision
  • When Will Russian Cars Go To Detroit
  • New Battery Era Fires Up GM
  • What Will Russians Drive In 2010

  • Boeing And US Air Force Demonstrate Advanced Airborne Networking First
  • Raytheon To Be Prime Contractor On Radar Common Data Link Program
  • Northrop Grumman Awarded Contract To Implement More Efficient Way to Support B-2 Bomber
  • New Land Warrior And Mounted Warrior Systems Digitize The Battlefield

  • US To Start Talks On Eastern Europe Missile Defence System
  • US Requests Official Talks Over Czech Anti-Missile Installation
  • China Encourages World-Wide Ballistic Missile Proliferation By Its Actions Says ABM Lobby
  • Israel Facing Critical Decision On ABM Roadmap

  • Escapes From Norway's Fish Farms Threaten Wild Salmon
  • Conservationists Meet To Avert Feared Tuna Extinction
  • California Fruit Crops Devastated By Freeze Says Schwarzenegger
  • California's Big Freeze Threatening Citrus Crops

  • Indonesian Mud Volcano Is Probably A Natural Event
  • Lockheed Martin Wins Major CDC Contract To Support Emergency Response Preparedness
  • USJFCOM Hosts First-Responder Focused Modeling And Simulation Demonstration Event
  • Rural America Better Prepared For Disaster Management

  • New Approaches For Producing Large Composite Structures
  • Raytheon Awarded Contract for Early Warning Radars Sustainment
  • Northrop Grumman Supplies TouchTable Technology to CNN's 'The Situation Room'
  • LISA Pathfinder Spacecraft Test Phase About To Start

  • Conceptualizing A Cyborg
  • Hunt On For Next World-Changing Gadget At US Electronics Show
  • NASA Awaits New FIRST Robotics Season
  • Futuristic Tools And Toys At Largest Consumer Electronics Show

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement