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SUBCO Plans 16-Fibre-Pair Hypercable Linking Australia and California

SUBCO announced APX East, a new express submarine cable linking Australia directly to the mainland United States, with a planned Ready for Service date in Q4 2028. The 16-fibre-pair system runs an all-deepwater route between Sydney and California, eliminating intermediate landings or optical regeneration. SUBCO positions APX East as the lowest-latency path between the two countries while simplifying operations for fibre-pair owners.

APX East relies on a continuous optical design that supports single-end power feeding across the full transpacific span, a configuration SUBCO says avoids intermediate points of presence and reduces permitting complexity. Customers install submerged line terminal equipment at each end, with no need for mid-span regeneration. The company also plans optional branches to Hawaii and Fiji, targeted for service in 2029, without affecting the trunk system’s 2028 delivery timeline.

The project targets rising international bandwidth demand driven by large-scale AI infrastructure planned for Australia. SUBCO cites forecasts of 3 GW of AI data center capacity by 2028, requiring between 75 Tbps and 150 Tbps of international connectivity. By avoiding coastal congestion zones near Sydney and landing north of the existing cable protection area, APX East aims to diversify physical routes while accelerating deployment.

“APX East will be a critical enabler for Australia’s aspirations to become a leader in the AI world,” said Bevan Slattery, Founder and Co-CEO of SUBCO.

🌐  Analysis

The announcement adds urgency to the transpacific subsea market as hyperscalers and neocloud providers align network capacity with AI data center build-outs rather than traditional cloud growth cycles. APX East’s 2028 RFS places it ahead of several proposed Australia–US systems with later timelines, tightening competition around early access to fibre-pair capacity optimized for AI traffic patterns.

Cable System Primary Route Australia Landing Singapore Landing RFS Notes
INDIGO Central & West Australia – Indonesia – Singapore Sydney, Perth Yes 2019 Low-latency regional system focused on SEA connectivity
Hawaiki Australia / NZ – United States Sydney No 2018 Early hyperscale-friendly transpacific design
Southern Cross NEXT Australia / NZ – United States Sydney No 2022 High fibre-pair upgrade to legacy Southern Cross routes
Apricot Australia – Japan – Taiwan – Guam – SEA Sydney Indirect 2022 Google-backed system optimized for cloud traffic
JGA South Australia – Japan Sydney No 2023 Direct Oceania–North Asia capacity expansion
Echo / Bifrost Australia – SEA – United States Australia (Echo) Yes (Bifrost) 2024–2025 Hyperscaler-backed transpacific architecture
SEA-US Southeast Asia – United States No Yes 2017 Early high-capacity Singapore–US system
SJC2 SEA – Japan – Hong Kong No Yes 2018 Intra-Asia cloud and content backbone
ADC (Asia Direct Cable) Singapore – China – Japan – SEA No Yes 2023 High fibre-pair density for hyperscalers
MIST Singapore – India – Myanmar – Thailand No Yes 2023 Westward expansion from Singapore hub

🌐 We’re tracking the latest developments in subsea cable infrastructure, policy, and deployments. Follow our ongoing coverage at: https://convergedigest.com/category/subsea/

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