{"id":432,"date":"2018-06-20T13:06:00","date_gmt":"2018-06-20T20:06:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/spijue.wpengine.com\/news\/yukon-rejects-alaska-fiber-link\/"},"modified":"2018-08-13T12:55:33","modified_gmt":"2018-08-13T19:55:33","slug":"yukon-rejects-alaska-fiber-link","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/yukon-rejects-alaska-fiber-link\/","title":{"rendered":"Yukon rejects Alaska fiber link"},"content":{"rendered":"
This article has been updated to include comment from Alaska Power and Telephone.<\/em><\/p>\n The Yukon government will not build a cross-border fiber-optic link connecting Alaska over land, it announced Wednesday.<\/p>\n In a ceremony at Yukon College in Whitehorse, Deputy Premier Ranj Pillai said the provincial government has instead elected to work with the Canadian federal government and telecommunications firm Northwestel to build a new fiber-optic cable north from Whitehorse to Inuvik, Northwest Territories<\/a>. There, the new 483-mile cable will connect with a similar fiber line<\/a> built to serve the Northwest Territories.<\/p>\n “We’ve chosen the all-Canadian northern loop,” Pillai said.<\/p>\n Navdeep Bains, Canadian Minister of Innovation, Science and Economic Development, flew to the Yukon for Wednesday’s ceremony. The Canadian federal government is paying most of the cost of the cable.<\/p>\n The $79 million (Canadian dollars) cable is being built to serve as an alternative path for internet and phone service for the Yukon, which has only a single cable that runs along the Alaska Highway. That cable has been severed on a frequent basis by disaster and accident, leading to demand for a redundant route.<\/p>\n In picking the northern route, which will follow the route of the Dempster Highway, the Yukon rejected a much shorter alternative between Whitehorse and Skagway<\/a>. That route would have created the first overland fiber-optic connection between Alaska and Canada. Currently, Alaska’s only fiber-optic telecommunications links to the Outside run through a handful of undersea cables that come ashore in Washington state and Oregon.<\/p>\n Those cables have been disrupted by undersea earthquakes<\/a> in the past, cutting Alaskans off from ordinary phone and internet service. A Whitehorse-Skagway link would have created a backup route for Alaskans as well as Yukoners.<\/p>\n An alternative cable has been proposed to connect Alaska to the rest of the world through the Arctic Ocean, but the former CEO of Quintillion Alaska was arrested in April<\/a> on charges related to “a multimillion-dollar fraud scheme” related to the project.<\/p>\n