Telecom regulator suggests norms for undersea cables
- June 21, 2023
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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Telecom regulator suggests norms for undersea cables
Subject :Science and technology
Section : Awareness in IT
Concept :
- The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) has come up with recommendations on rules for undersea cables connecting Indian telecom networks to the global Internet.
- Earlier, the Department of Telecommunications had sought TRAI’s recommendations on whether Indian companies without a major stake in undersea cables, usually developed by high-powered global consortia, be permitted to apply for clearances acting alone.
- TRAI has recommended that all Indian telcos operating undersea cables be required to submit proof that they own at least part of the undersea cables that are in Indian waters.
- TRAI also recommended introducing a distinction between a cable landing station and “points of presence” to which the station is connected.
- TRAI further recommended that “dark fibre” should be permitted on existing cable landing stations, and “stubs”, which are short cables in Indian waters for potential future expansion, also be permitted.
- Furthermore, TRAI suggested undersea cables be notified as critical information infrastructure so that they can be extended protection by the National Critical Information Infrastructure Protection Centre.
Dark fibre:
- It is an unused optical fibre that has been laid but is not currently being used in fibre-optic communication
- Since fibre-optic cable transmits information in the form of light pulses, a “dark” cable refers to one through which light pulses are not being transmitted.
- Companies lay extra optical fibres in order to avoid cost repetition when more bandwidth is needed.
- It is also known as unlit fibre.
- These unused fibre optic cables later created a new market for unique private services that could not be accommodated on lit fibre cables (i.e cables used in traditional long-distance communication).
- Unused strands of Fiber are leased to customers to create their own privately-operated optical fibre network. This is different from the leasing of bandwidth. In other words, It is in contrast to purchasing bandwidth or a leased line on an existing network. The Dark Fiber network is under total control of the client rather than the network provider.
- The benefits which can be reaped from it are –
- High performance
- Secured network flow and separation from other traffic
- Superfast speeds
- Low and Fixed cost
- Reliable medium
- Full control of the fibre-optic network.
Applications include:
- Fibre to the Antenna (FTTA)-Mobile network providers can use dark fibre to provide mobile backhaul, 5G backhaul and core network connections.
- Data Centre Interconnect (DCI)-Dark fibre can be used to provide a high capacity, direct point to point connection between two data centres.
- National Research and Educational Networks (NRENs)-Most National Research and Educational Networks (NRENs) that link together Universities and research establishments use dark fibre.
- There are numerous licenses under which a vendor can lease dark fibre in India.
- Co-location is a data centre within the exchange premises hosting a broker’s server that is connected by fibre network. Co-lo space is rented by exchanges to brokers for speed trading.
- Some brokers are selectively allowed to install dark fibre without a clear policy. The NSE has no clearly-defined public policy as to when and how it permitted competing carriers into co-lo, which ensured advantages to a select few.