From the BBC:
“Damaged cable leaves Shetland
cut off from mainland”
Communications to Shetland have
been severely disrupted after a subsea cable was damaged. Police have declared
a major incident after the south subsea cable between the islands and the
mainland was cut. The force said phones, internet and computers were not usable
and that officers were patrolling to try to reassure residents. Repairs to
another cable connecting Shetland and Faroe are ongoing after it was damaged
last week. MP for Orkney and Shetlands
Alastair Carmichael told the BBC he had raised the issue with the UK
government, but understood it could be days before communications were
restored. He said the priority was fixing the issue but that resilience would
also need to be looked at in future. Homes and businesses are affected across
the isles, which are 130 miles (210 km) from the Scottish mainland and have a
population of about 23,000. The BBC has heard reports that many shops unable to
take card payments.
Meanwhile Highlands and Islands
Airports told the BBC that Sumburgh Airport was "operating as
normal", but would advise passengers to contact Loganair for further
updates. Serco NorthLink Ferries confirmed they did not anticipate the problem
would have any impact on sailings. A BT Group spokesperson said: "Due to a
break in a third-party subsea cable connecting Shetland with the Scottish
mainland, some phone, broadband and mobile services are affected. "Engineers
are working to divert services via other routes as soon as possible and we'll
provide further updates. Our external subsea provider is also looking to
restore their link quickly. "Anyone who needs to call 999 should try their
landline or their mobile, even if they don't have signal from their own mobile
provider. We're sorry for any inconvenience." An outage is affecting some
landlines, mobiles and internet on Shetland. In an emergency you can try
calling 999 even if you don't have a signal. We have extra patrols out and
about in case of an emergency
Emergency services have had to
implement temporary backup arrangements. Police Scotland said it was working
with partners including the Scottish Fire and Recue Service and HM Coastguard
to bring additional emergency support to the island. The force said an emergency
hub had been set up in the Tesco car park in South Road, Lerwick. Ch Insp Jane
Mackenzie told the BBC's Good Morning Scotland programme that police officers
would be more visible on the island in the meantime. She said: "We're
still trying to work to establish the full extent of the problem - we know
there are some telephone lines working, 999 lines are believed to be working
and some mobile networks are still working. "So anyone calling 999 should
be able to do so from a mobile phone. What we would ask is if you have an
emergency you should first try a landline or mobile to call 999.m "If that
doesn't work, you should flag down an emergency service vehicle that isn't
using their blue light or attend either a police station, hospital, fire or
ambulance station to report the emergency."
Two cable problems 'rare'
Ch
Insp Mackenzie urged the public not to use phone lines for non-urgent calls and
to check on elderly or vulnerable people more frequently as assistance alarms
may not be operating effectively. The cable that was damaged between
Faroe and Shetland last week will be repaired on Saturday, according to Faroese
Telecom's head of infrastructure Páll Vesturbú. He said: "The
damage is affecting most of telecom services to Shetland. There are some services
still working but we will try to establish more services during the day if
that's possible. "We expect it will be fishing vessels that damaged
the cable but it is very rare that we have two problems at the same time."
MP Alistair Carmichael added that the damage had caused "catastrophic
impact". He said: "Communication is critical to modern life,
to business, to the emergency services and education - just about every aspect
of modern life. "It's like somebody has flipped a switch and taken
us back 20 or 30 years. You live in an island community, you know sometimes
these things happen and that's why we have to learn the lessons from
this."
How do subsea cables work? Modern
submarine cables use fibre optic technology and are typically as wide as a
garden hose, according to telecoms market research firm TeleGeography. It
explains lasers on one end fire at extremely rapid rates down thin glass fibres
to receptors at the other end of the cable. These glass fibres are wrapped in
layers of plastic - and sometimes steel wire - for protection. Cables lie on
the ocean floor, while nearer to the shore they are buried under the seabed for
additional protection. The firm said "considerable care" is taken to
make sure cables avoid fault zones, fishing zones, anchoring areas and other
dangers. Ian Brown, a partner with Lerwick-based internet provider
Shetland Broadband, said he became aware of a problem just after 00:00 on
Thursday when his home broadband went off. He said the north cable was
broken on 15 October in a clean break, but the southern one was not a clean
break because there are around 100 fibres in the cable - and not all had been
broken. Shetland Broadband is still operational because the fibres it
uses were not damaged. Mr Brown said the impact ranged from minor
inconvenience for islanders to disruption to businesses and local NHS services
that rely on their online connection. He said Shetland Broadband was
working with the NHS to try and resolve its issues. In another example,
he said a delivery of 2,000 parcels to the islands encountered problems as they
could not be scanned. Mr Brown said: "We don't know if the cable
was hooked up by a ship or lifted and caught by the currents. It is a very rare
event, a bit like storm damage."
^ It is odd for 1 cable to be
damaged and strange to have both cables damaged at the same time. ^
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-scotland-north-east-orkney-shetland-63326102
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