On Thursday, March 14, Ghana and other West African countries experienced a disruption in internet services, one of which has never occurred.
Experts described the situation as a “huge blow” as four submarine cables responsible for transmitting internet service to some West African countries broke down leading to the severe internet disruption.
The National Communications Authority at a press briefing on Sunday, March 24, 2024 said the incident was the first of its kind to have occurred as four submarine cables have never broken down as experienced.
Undersea cable cut: Here are the African countries facing internet outage
Director General of the Authority, Dr. Joe Anokye further highlighted that although submarine cables do experience faults, a simultaneous break down of four submarine cables have never happened before.
He listed the similar situations that have been experienced in the past ten years in Ghana’s territorial waters.
June 2014: The submarine cable, ACE, experienced a fault which did not pose a severe impact to internet users. According to Dr. Anokye, it took four weeks for it to be restored.
September 2014: WACS submarine cable experienced what the NCA said was a shunt fault but did not impact internet traffic.
May 2019: Again, ACE experienced a shunt fault with trawler activities as probable cause. However, there was no traffic or internet service impacted.
December 2019: SAT-3 (SEGMENT 14) went through a shunt fault which took 39 days for it to be restored. During that same period, subsea cable, MAINONE also experienced a shunt fault with no traffic impacted.
January 2020: WACS had one of its cables experienced a double fibre cut in London and Congo. Although, the NCA said it was a serious problem, the Authority explained that no traffic was impacted.
December 2020: Subsea cable, MAINONE went through a shunt fault which took four weeks for restoration.
February 2022: Again, MAINONE experienced a shunt fault but with no traffic impacted.
June 2022: SAT-3 (SEGMENT 12) also experienced a shunt fault which impacted traffic as it took 44 days for resolution.
May 2023: the subsea cable, ACE broke down and was restored in July of that same year. Not much traffic or internet disruption was impacted.
October 2023: ACE subsea cable turned faulty and was restored in November 2023 with no much traffic impacted.
Dr. Anokye emphasized that with all these cable cuts experienced in the last ten years, there was not any single occasion where two cables were faulty at the same time.
This, he said was different from the fault experienced on Thursday March 14, where four cables were all down at the same time.
“All of the subsea cables, at least three of them MAINONE, ACE and WACS have enough capacity to carry a good chunk of all the traffic in Ghana.
“In fact, WACS has the capacity to carry all the traffic at the same time. They have 1.5 terabytes,” he explained.
The post Internet disruption: Check out faulty Submarine cables which have occurred in Ghana in the last 10 years first appeared on 3News.
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