Main Menu
Home
News
Articles
Events
Forums
Web Links
Tools
About Us
Site Map
Tech Events Calendar
August 2008
S M T W T F S
27282930311 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27 28 29 30
31 1 2 3 4 5 6
This month
Upcoming Tech Events
No Upcoming Tech Events

Google
 

Home arrow News arrow News Archives arrow December 2007 arrow FibraLink to connect to Colombia by March 2008


FibraLink to connect to Colombia by March 2008 PDF Print E-mail
Written by jamaica-gleaner.com   
Friday, 14 December 2007
Fibralink Jamaica Limited is investing another US$80 million (J$5.72 billion) to expand its submarine fibre-optic network from Jamaica to Cartagena, Colombia, via Florida.

The company, a subsidiary of Columbus Communications - owned by Canadian John Risley and Michael Lee Chin through the Barbados subsidiary of AIC - has already invested some US$43 million for the first phase of its Caribbean fibre-optic cable project.

FibraLink Jamaica's CEO, Richard Pardy, said the laying of this second phase of cable could begin in "a matter of weeks", since his company had obtained the necessary clearance from the National Environment and Planning Agency for work to be done, Prospect and Bull Bay.

Total system

Pardy explained that the total system for phase two costs US$80 million, but the Jamaica leg will cost about US$10 million.

In the first phase of the project, Jamaica was linked to Florida, via The Bahamas, the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico.

"We are building a system from Bull Bay in St. Thomas to Morant Point which goes offshore some 70 kilometres into two directions," Pardy explained. "A portion of it goes to Boca Raton in Florida and the other portion to Cartagena, Colombia," he said.

An international marine operator, Tyco Marine, has been contracted to lay the cable, he said.

Dr. Conrad Douglas, principal of Conrad Douglas and Associates, the company which conducted the environmental assessment for the project, explained that instead of trenching across the beaches, the strategy will be to deliver from the seafloor to the land via a hole.

Pardy said that the expansion by FibraLink will increase bandwidth capacity to the island by a factor of about 60 over the current 2.5 gigabits per second, or enough capacity to give every household in Jamaica access to broadband.

But he regards this entire Caribbean and the Americas project as even more than improving bandwidth.

"It's not a capacity issue, it's a restructuring system or a backup system," he said. "We are living in a zone prone to disasters, earthquake and hurricanes. We spend so that we can survive a hurricane and it's critical that we maintain contact with the international world."

article link

 
Latest Forum Threads
World Of Warcraft :- JamRock Guild
by ShadowWolfe Hellscream Aug-28 05:26 AM
What are your top 5 places you would want to work
by koss Aug-28 04:19 AM
Chat room for techj?
by CyVan Aug-28 03:35 AM
Grammatical Slip-ups
by ragueu Aug-28 03:02 AM
My Nokia N82 bricked in 3 days: HELP!
by T-Zero Aug-28 02:13 AM
black razr for sale..CHEAP (used)
by don_corleone Aug-28 01:21 AM
Problem with NTLDR
by ctssltd Aug-28 01:01 AM
my pc wont boot all im seeing is RS482 test vbios
by ctssltd Aug-28 12:55 AM
Pearl or Ming?
by kedron Aug-28 12:47 AM
Lights Out?
by kedron Aug-28 12:39 AM


Thursday, 28 August 2008
 
Bookmark Us
Bookmark Website
Make homepage
Polls
Do you currently use a VoIP product/service to make international calls?
 

Last 5 Links Added
 Whizwise
Hits: 346
 InfoGroup Ltd
Hits: 370
 iPhoneJamaica.Com
Hits: 1369
 dotTech ICT Training...
Hits: 1136
 DOW Networks
Hits: 967
Featured Links
Who's Online
We have 7 guests online

Site best viewed at 1024x768
Copyright MMV TechJamaica.com. All Rights Reserved.