Reykjavík Grapevine - mar. 2023, Síða 8

Reykjavík Grapevine - mar. 2023, Síða 8
8 The Reykjavík Grapevine 2/23 Best before: March 2, 2023 It’s something out of a Hollywood blockbuster, or at least a symptom of some global crisis more central to the plot — be it zombie apocalypse, an alien invasion, or a cataclysmic global weather event. A world without internet. Have you ever really thought about how much of your daily life hinges on data connectivity and high-speed internet? Your apps and email, banking and shopping, even the light bulbs and other features of your modern smart home. Our lives are run by those little glass fibre cables connecting nearly every home and workplace in the world like the web of the monstrous Djieien. Some 12 million Canadians got a taste of the disconnected life when, on July 8, 2022, telecommunications provider Rogers Communications experienced a major service outage. Home internet was down, mobile users couldn’t call emergency services, and the country’s major interbank network facilitating payments and money transfers ceased to exist. It was a day-long reckoning and it only affected roughly 25% of the country. How would that situation play out on an island? How would that situa- tion play out in Iceland? Trouble down under It was in September 2022, two months after that brief outage in Canada and seven months into Russia’s war on Ukraine, that the news of increased submarine activity around western infrastructure was making interna- tional headlines. As Moscow and Euro- pean governments exchanged barbs about who was responsible for soaring oil prices and the slowed westward flow of Russian natural gas, there was a rupture in a pipeline running along the Baltic seabed. Then another and another and another. Four ruptures were reported in the Nord Stream 1 and 2 pipelines carrying natural gas from Russia to Germany. Two of the damaged areas lay within Denmark’s exclusive economic zone and two in Sweden’s. All four, a Swed- ish investigative team concluded in November, were the result of “gross sabotage.” “Analysis that has now been carried out shows traces of explosives on several of the objects that were recov- ered” Mats Ljungqvist, the prosecu- tor leading the investigation, said in a Nov. 18 press briefing that was reported on by The Guardian. But what does this have to do with Iceland? We revel in our abundant geothermal energy, so those gas pipelines aren’t coming our way. But pipelines aren’t the only valuable pieces of infrastructure running along the bottom of the ocean. In addition to increased NATO focus on the security of natural gas infrastructure, Russia’s global posture over the past years has seen the atten- tion of western governments turn to the security of their submarine telecommunications cables. The globe-spanning network of more than 420 submarine communications cables measure more than 1.3 million kilometres and carry more than 90% of the world's internet traffic. In Iceland, it’s 100%. “I’M NOT GOING TO SUGAR COAT IT AND CLAIM THERE'S A PLAN IN PLACE.” ICELAND DIS– CONNECTED There’s a lot riding on our submarine cables — what if they went bust? Words: Catharine Fulton Images: Kosmonatka

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