On November 18, 2024, two undersea cables were severed under circumstances that are yet to be fully understood. The first, a cable connecting Lithuania and Sweden, was cut near the Lithuanian coast. This disruption affected about a third of Lithuania’s internet capacity, although service has since been restored. The second, the C-Lion1 cable linking Finland and Germany, also experienced damage. This cable is a crucial communication line, spanning 1,200 kilometers and serving as Finland’s only direct connection to Central Europe.
Recent disruptions to two undersea internet cables in the Baltic Sea have yet again highlighted a pressing issue for businesses worldwide: the vulnerabilities inherent in our global communications infrastructure. These incidents, occurring amid heightened geopolitical tensions and fears of hybrid warfare, serve as a wake-up call for companies to reevaluate their approach to network resilience.
On November 18, 2024, two undersea cables were severed under circumstances that are yet to be fully understood. The first, a cable connecting Lithuania and Sweden, was cut near the Lithuanian coast. This disruption affected about a third of Lithuania’s internet capacity, although service has since been restored. The second, the C-Lion1 cable linking Finland and Germany, also experienced damage. This cable is a crucial communication line, spanning 1,200 kilometers and serving as Finland’s only direct connection to Central Europe.
These incidents are not isolated. The U.S. and European countries have previously reported increased foreign activity near undersea cables, signaling potential risks of sabotage. Such vulnerabilities are not just geopolitical issues; they are business-critical concerns.
Undersea cables carry an estimated 95% of global internet traffic, making them the backbone of modern communications. When these cables are disrupted, businesses dependent on uninterrupted connectivity face risks including:
To mitigate these risks, businesses must adopt strategies to diversify and secure their connectivity. One critical approach is multihoming, which involves connecting to multiple Internet Service Providers (ISPs).
While multihoming provides a certain layer of resilience, it requires sophisticated management to maximize its effectiveness. This is where intelligent routing solutions become essential.
Noction’s Intelligent Routing Platform (IRP) is designed to optimize and automate traffic management in multihomed networks. By continuously monitoring network conditions, Noction IRP ensures businesses can quickly adapt to disruptions like those in the Baltic Sea.
Case in Point: In scenarios like the Baltic Sea cable disruptions, businesses using Noction IRP could have their traffic rerouted automatically through alternative pathways, avoiding service interruptions and maintaining productivity.
The Baltic Sea incidents underline a critical truth: the stability of global networks can no longer be taken for granted. As geopolitical tensions rise and hybrid warfare becomes a reality, major players at the global level discuss protective measures. Businesses, however, must act now to prioritize network resilience.
The incidents in the Baltic Sea remind us that resilience is not a luxury; it is a necessity.