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The diversity, frequency and severity of natural hazard impacts on subsea telecommunications networks

Bricheno, Lucy; Yeo, Isobel; Clare, Michael; Hunt, James; Griffiths, Allan; Carter, Lionel; Talling, Peter J.; Baker, Megan; Wilson, Stuart; West, Matthew; Panuve, Semisi; Fonua, Samuiela

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Authors

Lucy Bricheno

Isobel Yeo

Michael Clare

James Hunt

Allan Griffiths

Lionel Carter

Stuart Wilson

Matthew West

Semisi Panuve

Samuiela Fonua



Abstract

Subsea cables underpin global communications, carrying more than 99 % of all digital data traffic worldwide. While this >1.6 million km-long network has been designed to be highly resilient, subsea cables can be damaged by a number of natural hazards that occur across all water depths in the ocean. Here, we explore the diversity of natural hazards that can damage cables, considering a broad frequency-magnitude spectrum. This paper is the first global perspective of actual and potential hazards affecting cables. As such, it is an accessible overview of the regional variability and complexity of hazards. Relatively rare and extreme events, such as super typhoons, submarine landslides or associated turbidity currents and volcanic eruptions, can synchronously cause widespread damage to multiple systems, in some cases disconnecting entire countries or dramatically slowing data traffic. We show that damage is rarely linked to an initial event, instead arising from cascades of processes that can lag by years. Not all instances of cable damage that relate to natural processes are linked to extreme events. We show that much smaller intensity meteorological and oceanographic processes such as storms and continuous seafloor currents that have been overlooked by previous studies can also damage subsea cables. New analysis of past instances of cable damage reveals that a significant proportion of previously unattributed faults may relate to such low-level but sustained impacts. It is these hazards that are most likely to change in frequency and magnitude in response to ongoing climate change but are also more predictable. Through mapping of exposure to these different hazards, we identify geographically-constrained hazard hotspots and identify various mitigation measures to enhance the evidence base and further strengthen subsea telecommunications network resilience.

Citation

Bricheno, L., Yeo, I., Clare, M., Hunt, J., Griffiths, A., Carter, L., Talling, P. J., Baker, M., Wilson, S., West, M., Panuve, S., & Fonua, S. (2024). The diversity, frequency and severity of natural hazard impacts on subsea telecommunications networks. Earth-Science Reviews, 259, Article 104972. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.earscirev.2024.104972

Journal Article Type Review
Acceptance Date Dec 1, 2024
Online Publication Date Nov 12, 2024
Publication Date Dec 1, 2024
Deposit Date Feb 24, 2025
Publicly Available Date Feb 25, 2025
Journal Earth-Science Reviews
Print ISSN 0012-8252
Electronic ISSN 1872-6828
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 259
Article Number 104972
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.earscirev.2024.104972
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/3528721
Other Repo URL https://nora.nerc.ac.uk/id/eprint/538567/

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