1 / 12

International Cable Protection Committee?

ITU Workshop Submarine Cables for Ocean/Climate Monitoring & Disaster Warning The Technology – An Operations Perspective Mr. Michael Costin Executive Committee Member International Cable Protection Committee Rome - 9 September 2011. International Cable Protection Committee?.

sasson
Télécharger la présentation

International Cable Protection Committee?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ITU Workshop Submarine Cables for Ocean/Climate Monitoring & Disaster WarningThe Technology – An Operations PerspectiveMr. Michael CostinExecutive Committee MemberInternational Cable Protection CommitteeRome - 9 September 2011

  2. International Cable Protection Committee? • ICPC is an industry body comprising submarine cable owners/operators, system manufacturers, service providers and government stakeholders. • ICPC supports its members with environmental, legal and technical information and advice • ICPC current prime activities are in: • Developing best practice advice • Promoting awareness of submarine cables as critical infrastructure • Monitoring the evolution of international treaties and national legislation to protect submarine cable interests

  3. The Challenge of Change • Rapid development of offshore renewable energy • Increased incidence of damage caused by shipping • Seabed becoming crowded in some areas • Need to maintain harmony with other seabed users • Need to ensure harmony with seabed environment • Need to improve security of submarine cables • Increased regulation of coastal and high seas

  4. Typical Submarine Cable System Network ManagementSystem Armoured Cable TerminalEquipment LightweightCable Repeater Cable Station Source: U.K. Cable Protection Committee & Alcatel-Lucent Submarine Networks

  5. Submarine Cable Network • Global submarine cable network comprises hundreds of commercial, independently owned, domestic and international systems • International systems can cost up to several hundred million Euros to build. • Project development/build takes 2-4 years • International consortium formation and funding focussed upon commercial risks. • International project development concerned for regulatory and permitting issues

  6. Submarine Cable Build • Cable operators focus upon routing cables for the: • Safest route to avoid areas of natural (undersea volcanoes) and man-made (designated anchorage and trawl zones) hazards and environmental sensitivity • Shortest possible route so as to minimise latency • Cable operators aim to apply the best cable type for each part of the route, having regard for potential threats from fishing and anchors, whilst minimising cost • Bury the cable into the seabed to mitigate potential threats from fishing and anchoring. New cables target burial up to 3 metres subject to the assessed threat level.

  7. Threats From External Aggression % 80 60 40 20 1980 1990 2000 1960 1970 • Fishing – high incidence but impact restricted to individual cables • Anchors – medium but increasing incidence that can impact several cables • Natural Hazards (e.g. earthquakes) – low incidence but can impact multiple cables Fishing Anchors Cable faults caused by external aggressiondemonstrate the impact of human activities Base data provided by Tyco Telecommunications & Global Marine Systems Published in Wood & Carter (2008) IEEE Journal of Oceanic Engineering

  8. Hengchun 2006: An Earthquake that Caused Major Disruption to the Cable Network Eurasian Plate 80 mm/yr Philippine Plate • (Source: Prof. Lionel Carter, ICPC Marine Environmental Advisor) • Earthquake triggered submarine landslides near the junction of 2 tectonic plates. China Okinawa Trough • Landslides caused turbidity current that flowed over 330 km & broke 9 cables in sequence. Chinese Taipei Ryuku Trench • From the timing of breaks, the average speed of the turbidity current was ~20km/hr. • Damage occurred in water depths to 4000m - some cables covered with mud from current. • Cable repairs involved 11 ships & took 49 days. Modified from Source: Anderson M., U. Arizona Geosciences

  9. Submarine Cable Operation • Submarine cable system threats can result in a complete cable breakage or a “shunt” fault of the cable’s conductor used for powering repeaters. • Restoration of traffic when a cable breaks or for repair of a shunt fault can take days • Multiple cable breaks can have an impact of several weeks, even several months

  10. Submarine Cable Maintenance • Cable repair works typically take 7-10 days to complete, but the actual duration of a cable outage will be affected by: • Location of fault relative to the repair vessel • Type of fault (i.e. Shunt or complete break) • Securing any requisite permits/clearances, which can take up to several weeks • Weather conditions • Cable outages can take months to clear.

  11. Multi-Purpose Submarine Cables • Some power-telecommunications cables • Issue of primary/priority purpose of cable • Cable operators do not repair/replace repeaters with faulted components if the overall system performance is maintained. • If a fault arises with the plant/equipment for the secondary purpose, what priority will its repair have?

  12. Sharing the seabed in harmony General Enquiries to ICPC: +44 1590 681673 Email: secretary@iscpc.org

More Related