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As polar ice recedes, China plans for a massive telecom cable across the Arctic seabed

The proposal aims to create the fastest data connection between Europe and China as soon as 2020

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Talks with Finland to build a telecommunications cable on the polar seabed could give China a new entry point to shaping the development of the warming Arctic.

China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology and state-owned China Telecom Corp. are among those participating in discussions about building a 10,500-kilometer fiber-optic link across the Arctic Circle. The proposal, which also involves Finland, Japan, Russia and Norway, aims to create the fastest data connection between Europe and China as soon as 2020.

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Besides speeding China’s communication with European financial centers and data hubs, the project is among Beijing’s most ambitious forays into the hotly contested region. In June, China included the Arctic in President Xi Jinping’s signature Belt and Road trade-and-infrastructure initiative and is drafting a broad strategy on its plans for the area.

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The cable also highlights China’s growing ties with Finland, after Xi in April became the first Chinese president to visit the country since 1995. A freight railway between the Finnish city of Kouvola and China’s Xian opened last month and Finnair Oyj is seeking to become a regional hub for flights between the two continents.

“The tide has changed in Finland-China economic ties in these two years or so,” said Jari Sinkari, the Finnish consul-general to Hong Kong and Macau. “It used to be Finland investing more in the Chinese market, but now China’s become the more active one in the partnership.”

Cinia Group Oy, a Finnish government-owned information and communications technology company, has “a prominent role” in the so-called Northeast Passage cable project and is looking for partners, said Marjukka Vihavainen-Pitkanen, a senior adviser with the Finnish Ministry of Transport and Communications. China Telecom officials expressed interest in participation at a Sept. 27 meeting in Helsinki, she said.

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It has been widely expressed that this cable route would provide a game changer in the industry

China Telecom said in a statement that it was “open in collaboration for win-win cooperation” and that “no concrete plan has been confirmed at this moment.” The Chinese Ministry of Industry Information and Technology, which according to Vihavainen-Pitkanen sent officials to the project’s first senior-level meeting in March, didn’t reply to faxed requests for comment.

“It has been widely expressed that this cable route would provide a game changer in the industry,” said Jukka-Pekka Joensuu, an executive adviser to Cinia. Estimates suggest the new cable could cut the time delay from Asia to Europe in half.

Cinia projects principle construction costs at around 700 million euros (US$820 million). Digital traffic between Europe and Asia was expected to triple over the next five years, said Sari Arho Havrén, Finland’s innovation consul in Hong Kong.

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Existing Europe-Asian underwater cables tend to take either a southern route through well-known pressure points, such as the Suez Canal and the Strait of Malacca, or through the U.S. and across the Pacific, said Nicole Starosielski, author of the 2015 book “The Undersea Network” and an associate professor of media, culture and communication at New York University.

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The “technically challenging” Arctic route is becoming more feasible as polar ice recedes amid climate change, Starosielski said. “It is more viable for telecommunication companies to propose these new and innovative routes than ever before,” she said.

The Arctic has entered a “new normal” of shrinking sea ice, according to an annual report released Tuesday by the U.S.’s National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The document said that surface water was warming and ice was melting at the fastest pace in 1,500 years.

Despite the cable push, Sinkari, the consul-general in Hong Kong, said Finland wanted to ensure no country’s efforts to develop the Arctic damaged the fragile environment. So the publication of China’s broader strategy was being watched closely.

“We’ve seen China become very active in the Arctic region in recent years,” Sinkari said. “It’ll be more transparent to know what China really wants with its Arctic strategy when they publish it.”

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