Legal and Regulatory Aspects of Telecommunication Submarine Cables


Book Description

Legal and regulatory aspects of telecommunication submarine cables--by Andrés J. Fígoli Pacheco-- is an easy-reading general book into the often-complex world of subsea cables regulation, written for cable operators, policymakers, legal professionals, and scholars. It covers some of the legal and regulatory aspects of submarine cables and encompasses a wide range of legal topics related to the ownership, installation, operation, and maintenance of submarine telecommunications cables. This book contains a compilation of articles written by the author, some of which have been published in Submarine Telecoms Forum Magazine since 2023, and additional useful material on court cases and specific regulations in several countries. Divided into several general categories and relevant sub-chapters, the book allows readers to dive into specific areas of the law with ease.




Submarine Cables


Book Description

Submarine fiber optic cables are critical communications infrastructure for States around the world. They are laid on the seabed, are often no bigger than a garden hose, and transmit immense amounts of data across oceans. These cables are the backbone of the internet and phone services and underpin core State interests, such as the finance sector, shipping, commerce and banking industries. Without the capacity to transmit and receive data via submarine cables, the economic security of States would be severely compromised. Despite the fact that 95 per cent of all data and telecommunications between States are transmitted via submarine cables, there is little understanding of how these cables operate. As a result some States have developed policies and laws that undermine the integrity of international telecommunications systems. Submarine Cables: The Handbook of Law and Policy provides a one-stop-shop of essential information relating to the international governance of submarine cables. The Handbook is a unique collaboration between international lawyers and experts from the submarine cable industry. It provides a practical insight into the law and policy issues that affect the protection of submarine cables, as well as the laying, maintenance and operation of such cables. In addition, the law and policy issues in relation to other special purpose cables, such as power cables, marine scientific research cables, military cables, and offshore energy cables, are also addressed.




Submarine Cables Protection and Regulations


Book Description

This book highlights the critical importance of laying, quick relinking, and protecting submarine cables with timely approval for carriers and cable repairing ships and how these are most challenging in many jurisdictions. It identifies that a dedicated national instrument on submarine cable as a way forward is yet to be appreciated by many States, and presently, there is no model legal framework for national instruments on submarine cables available. To bridge these gaps, the book undertakes a systematic inquiry and analysis of submarine cable regimes' and relevant authorities. It consults existing knowledge on international law on cables and analyzes specific principles and provisions on laying repair and maintenance of submarine cables and states’ obligations towards protecting cables from vulnerabilities. It touches upon cable regulation in the deep sea concerning the International Seabed Authority and proposed biodiversity agreement. It indicates suitable measures on cable laying, etc., and security risks in the marine space beyond the national jurisdictions. To map States’ response, it explores the domestic cable regimes, including both the selected jurisdictions and Australia and New Zealand, analyses specific legal provisions and institutional set-up, and demonstrates state practices, approaches, and loopholes in the governance of the cable system within national jurisdictions. The book suggests adopting the spatial ocean management approach, dedicated regulatory authority, a competent enforcement agency, strict liability with exemplary punishment on cable damage, and the cable system to strengthen the cable system's management. Finally, it arranges the fundamental premises of a common minimum framework for national instruments seeking coastal states’ deliberations in implementing initiatives towards a robust law and policy for reliability, resiliency, and security of the cable system. The cable industries, pipeline, fishing, shipping industries, academicians, government authorities, international bodies, and the maritime community worldwide are looking at the issues and challenges of submarine cable regimes, particularly national regimes and suggestive remedial measures. These stakeholders will find the book a useful reference.




Legal Aspects of Implementing International Telecommunication Links:Institutions, Regulations and Instruments


Book Description

Technological advances strongly influence developments in international telecommunications services. This book illustrates how international institutional and regulatory frameworks implement technological advances in the field of telecommunications. These frameworks canalize technology on the one hand and guide legal implementation of the actual international connections on the other. International telecommunications links are implemented by means of geostationary satellite or through submarine cables. The regulations and organizations dealing with satellite connections differ significantly from international regulations and organizations in the field of submarine cables. In Legal Aspects of Implementing International Telecommunication Links the concepts of `allocation' and `interconnection' are used to bridge the gap between these two different domains. Following a characterization and discussion of these concepts, The actual legal implementation of both types of connections is described in detail.




Legal Aspects of Implementing International Telecommunication Links; Institutions, Regulations and Instruments


Book Description

Technological advances strongly influence developments in (international) telecommunication services. The concept of the "Global Village", originating from McLuhan, becomes more and more a reality. The world lies at the tips of our fingers. This book tries to assert how the international institutional and regulatory frameworks implement technological advances in the field of telecommunications. These frameworks canalize technology on the one hand and guide the legal implementation of the actual international connections on the other. Focus is on the regulation of the construction of specific international telecommunication connections, i.e., submarine cable systems and satellite connections. The research was concluded January 1990. Occasionally, references to documents and literature of a later date are incorporated at relevant places in the notes.




Legal Issues of Constructing International Telecom Systems


Book Description

This article focuses on the regulations and instruments used in, the implementation of specific international telecommunication connection, i.e., submarine cable and satellite systems. It concentrates on the legal setting for legislating/regulating, international public telecommunication systems, namely, those systems to which the general public has access after paying a fee to the owners of a telecommunication facility. These systems provide the public with telecommunication services, such as telephone, telex and data communication services. No attention will be given to the regulation of private international telecommunication facilities (SWIFT or SITA). Legal arrangements applying to satellite systems differ considerably from those applying to submarine cables and common concepts will be presented to bridge the gap between these two different domains. In that sense an overall analysis of what used to be separate areas of law will be developed. This can be achieved by distinguishing three issues: (i) allocation of resources; (ii) interconnection between systems; (iii) the legal instruments used in the construction phase. This distinction enables potential users of (commercial) space telecommunications to compare both regulatory regimes, and decide which type of connection is, from a legal point of view, most effective in achieving the users' goal: Constructing a satellite telecommunication system or opt for the construction of a submarine cable connection.




International Submarine Cables and Biodiversity of Areas Beyond National Jurisdiction


Book Description

If one uses Facebook, Facetime, Skype, Netflix, or any application of the internet internationally, a submarine cable is involved. Fibre optic cables bind the world together and computer server farms, maintained by major telecom and content companies, allow vast amounts of data to be stored and retrieved from the cloud. Not often appreciated is the fact that these server locations worldwide are connected by submarine fibre optic cables. In this sense, the cloud is beneath the sea. While submarine communication cables have been in steady use since 1850, their preeminent place in the modern world has never been as dominant and personal as now. Recently, calls have mounted in the context of marine biodiversity beyond national jurisdiction (BBNJ) for centralized control of submarine cables and for express or de facto diminishment of the freedoms related to them via the United Nations Convention on Law of the Sea, that have served the world’s peoples for so long. In International Submarine Cables and Biodiversity of Areas Beyond National Jurisdiction, Douglas R. Burnett and Lionel Carter examine the time proven importance of the existing international treaties, the largely peer-reviewed science on the environmental interaction of submarine cables with high seas environments, and the current submarine cable issues in the context of the BBNJ debates.







Submarine Cables and the Oceans


Book Description

There are many things and services in our everyday life that we take for granted, and telecommunications is one of them. We surf the internet, send emails to friends and colleagues abroad, talk to family members in foreign countries over the phone, book airline seats and make banking transactions without actually realizing and appreciating the sophisticated technology that enables us to do so. This report covers the history and nature of cables, their special status in international law, their interaction with the environment and other ocean users and, finally, the challenges of the future. It is an evidence-based synopsis that aims to improve the quality and availability of information to enhance understanding and cooperation between all stakeholders. UNEP-WCMC in collaboration with the International Cable Protection Committee and UNEP has prepared this new report to provide an objective, factual description of the sub-marine cable industry and the interaction of submarine telecommunications (which route 95% of all international communications traffic) with the marine environment. This important report seeks to focus and guide deliberations and decision making on the wise conservation and protection of the oceans in concert with their sustainable management and use.




International Telecommunications Law and Policy


Book Description

Since the revolution in modern telecommunications that followed the invention of the telegraph, telecommunication networks have provided channels for the fast delivery of communications across national borders. This transnational nature of telecommunication networks have led to the establishment of international regulatory regimes on the subject. On the other hand, developing countries consider regional economic integration as a major strategy for promoting trade and development, telecommunications have been seen within this context as a strategic tool for facilitating regional economic integration. This has also led to the establishment of regional telecommunication regulatory regimes that aim to promote regional integration and regulatory harmonization. This book discusses telecommunication regimes established by international and regional organizations such as the United Nations, the International Telecommunication Union, the World Trade Organization, the African Union, the Economic Community of West African States, and the Southern African Development Community, among a number of others. It will be relevant to policy makers, regulators, lawyers, law students, investors and telecommunication operators, as well as any person interested in international and African regional telecommunication regimes.