Home GCC UAE New internet cables to bring better speeds, prices to UAE Four new cables are expected to land at the country this year by Robert Anderson April 21, 2016 The UAE could be set for faster internet speeds and lower prices following the landing of four submarine cables in the country this year. Etisalat submarine unit E-Marine’s managing director and chief executive Omar Jassim bin Kalban told the National that the new cables would result in faster speeds for mobiles and possibly lead operators to revise prices. They will also allow the country to handle a predicted rise in data usage as technologies like 5G mobile networks are introduced by 2020. Residents in the country have long complained about high internet prices and speeds often falling short of expectations. But the new cables, which will stretch from Europe to the Far East, will provide the UAE with “better connectivity” with the outside world, according to Kalban. They are believed to include: The Asia Africa Europe-1 cable, scheduled for completion in Q4. It spans 25,000km between France and China. The Bay of Bengal Gateway, due to be completed in Q1. It stretches 8,100km from the UAE to Malaysia. SeaMeWe-5, due to be completed in November. It will stretch 20,000km from Singapore to France. The new additions will bring the countries total cable connections to more than 15 in total. Kalban said the country’s bandwidth capacity would be four times the current capacity within the next 10 years. A network of submarine cables spanning the world’s oceans forms the backbone of the internet. New cables are regularly proposed and old ones are upgraded as demand for both data and diversity to prevent outages increases. “In case of damage, you will never have 100 per cent failure as there is a diversity in routing which will guarantee that most of the traffic is maintained at the same quality of service,” Kalban told the publication. In the UAE a popular landing point for the cables is Fujairah on the east coast, where data is then transmitted to cities using overland cables. Image courtesy of Telegeography’s Submarine Cable Map (http://www.submarinecablemap.com/) Tags Du Internet 0 Comments You might also like UAE’s du teams up with Orange to drive telecoms innovation Telecom giant du revamps b2b portfolio, unveils new sub-brands Du shines the spotlight on AI, digital innovation at Envision 2024 UAE telecom operator du’s half-year profits top 54%