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Cameroon's state-owned telecommunications provider CamTel has announced the start of installation work on the South Atlantic Submarine Cable (SAIL) system, designed to connect Kribi (Cameroon) and Fortaleza (Brazil).
According to the CamTel announcement by Cameroon Telecom, the laying vessel carrying 6,000 kilometers of cable set sail in Kribi on May 16 and is expected to be deployed at sea for 50 to 75 days (80 to 120 kilometers per day).
The cable will be laid using Huawei Marine's advanced 100G technology, and the entire 5,900km system will use four fiber pairs with a design capacity of 32Tbps
.
According to the plan, the system will be completed in September 2018 and aims to be the first straight-through cable connecting Africa and South America, which will provide reliable and high-quality telecommunications infrastructure
for the economic and social development of the two developing regions.
In December 2016, French manufacturer Nexans disclosed that it would supply the required submarine relay cables (ROCs) for the SAIL submarine cable system, which were manufactured and tested at Nexans' Rognan plant in Norway
.
Cameroon's state-owned telecommunications provider CamTel has announced the start of installation work on the South Atlantic Submarine Cable (SAIL) system, designed to connect Kribi (Cameroon) and Fortaleza (Brazil).
According to the CamTel announcement by Cameroon Telecom, the laying vessel carrying 6,000 kilometers of cable set sail in Kribi on May 16 and is expected to be deployed at sea for 50 to 75 days (80 to 120 kilometers per day).
The cable will be laid using Huawei Marine's advanced 100G technology, and the entire 5,900km system will use four fiber pairs with a design capacity of 32Tbps
.
According to the plan, the system will be completed in September 2018 and aims to be the first straight-through cable connecting Africa and South America, which will provide reliable and high-quality telecommunications infrastructure
for the economic and social development of the two developing regions.
In December 2016, French manufacturer Nexans disclosed that it would supply the required submarine relay cables (ROCs) for the SAIL submarine cable system, which were manufactured and tested at Nexans' Rognan plant in Norway
.