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ALCATEL NEARLY DOUBLES THE CAPACITY OF FLAG ATLANTIC-1
SYSTEM WITH ITS OPTINEX DWDM TECHNOLOGY
Alcatel at Telecom Geneva - Hall 4,
stand n° 210
Geneva, 13 October 1999
- Alcatel has been awarded by FLAG Atlantic Limited, a 50:50 joint venture
between FLAG Telecom and Global TeleSystems Group Inc., a contract to
deliver the first dual transatlantic system to provide a traffic capacity
of 2.4 Terabit/s. This capacity will be delivered on each of the two cables
and represents the highest capacity so far available on a six fibre pair
transoceanic system. This major enhancement to the capacity of the FLAG
Atlantic-1 system, which 10 months ago was the first terabit undersea
cable to be announced world-wide, demonstrates again Alcatel's market
leading technology in DWDM which responds to the accelerating demands
for bandwidth globally.
Jean Godeluck, Chief Operating Officer for the submarine
networks activities of Alcatel, commented: "We have worked closely
with the FLAG team and have taken full advantage of Alcatel's in-house
research and development capability. We have again been able to provide
FLAG Atlantic-1 with the competitive edge that comes from a technology
offer which anticipates our customer's needs and leads the industry. Alcatel
has been able to further build on this strength through its comprehensive
turnkey approach, which has left FA-1 free to focus on its own customers."
FLAG Atlantic-1 will be a loop system, connecting the
East Coast of the United States, with nodes in Manhattan, to two landings
in Europe - one in Saint Brieuc, France and the other in Cornwall, UK
with nodes in Paris and London respectively. A direct connection between
London and Paris will also be established, using fibre through the Channel
Tunnel. The system is planned to consist of three self-healing, high capacity
loops with twin terrestrial access points connecting to GTS TEN (Trans
European Network), as well as to the existing FLAG cable system, which
stretches over 28,000 kilometres from the UK to Japan. Customers on FLAG
Atlantic-1 will be able to add traffic either at the Landing Stations
or at the city nodes.
This configuration which is based on two widely separated
cables crossing the Atlantic with independent landfalls at each end offers
full redundancy from city to city.
The two sub-sea sections of the cable are approximately
6,000 kilometres and 6,500 kilometres respectively, while the two terrestrial
rings are approximately 120 kilometres and 1850 kilometres in length.
This gives an overall system length of around 14,500 kilometres.
"Alcatel and FLAG Atlantic-1 were able to develop a team approach
which meant that problems were dealt with as they arose. Without a doubt,
it was this team approach that has kept us ahead of the market in terms
of the implementation programme and service offering" said John
Draheim of FLAG Telecom. Steve Andrews of GTS added: "We are pleased
with the flexibility that Alcatel has shown. The contract that we signed
in January proved to be the starting point for developing the system and
not a rigid document as is so often the case."
Alcatel developed the technology for the FLAG Atlantic-1
system in its laboratories in France and England where it employs 2,000
people in the largest and most advanced facilities in the industry. Alcatel
will engineer and implement the FLAG Atlantic-1 system from the first
desk-based study of the route that the cables will take across the ocean,
to the training of FA's staff on the operation and maintenance of the
equipment. The FLAG Atlantic-1 system to be provided by Alcatel is designed
from the start to deal with the IP traffic needs of the future and to
provide the quality of service demanded by the end users of voice and
data.
About Alcatel
Alcatel builds next generation networks, delivering integrated end-to-end
voice and data communications solutions to established and new carriers,
as well as enterprises and consumers world-wide. With 120,000 employees
and sales of EURO 23.1 billion ($25.0 billion), Alcatel operates in more
than 130 countries.
Alcatel is the world's leading integrated submarine networks
supplier able to offer turnkey solutions to its customers. Not only does
Alcatel lead the world in terms of technology and capacity for its Optinex
undersea systems, it has the largest manufacturing capacity at 80,000
km per year and is able to control installation schedules through its
long-term leasing of four purpose-designed cable-lay vessels and three
further vessels suitable for maintenance or ancillary operations. The
company is currently working on a number of contracts around the world
valued at some US$3.1 billion, most of which utilise DWDM technology.
Current contracts include the most advanced undersea networks in the world
today; Atlantica-1, Atlantis-2 and Columbus-3 systems in the Atlantic,
the China-US, Japan-US and Southern Cross transpacific systems, and the
MAC and MAYA-1 systems in the Americas. Alcatel has the largest market
share in both the DWDM and submarine networks market segments, and is
able to complement its global
reach and presence with a true in-house, end to end, networking solution.
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