Rising sea levels could knock out the internet within 15 years — here’s how

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The world is ending ..... What to do ?? ... What to do !!! :)




August 11, 2018 | 5:00 am

Rising sea levels could knock out the internet within 15 years — here’s how

By Katie Dangerfield National Online Journalist, Breaking News Global News

gettyimages-929273422.jpg

Rising sea levels could knock out the internet -- and sooner than scientists thoughts.

Getty Images

Thousands of miles of internet cables zigzagging under coastal cities in the United States could be completely submerged underwater within the next 15 years, a team of researchers has found.

Cities like New York, Miami, Seattle and even coastal regions in Canada, could see rising sea levels destroy a network of cables and data centres that bolsters so much of modern life.

READ MORE: Two Canadian places that could be under water in 100 years — or sooner

Scientists at the University of Oregan and the University of Wisconsin-Madison, presented their study last month in Montreal, saying climate change is causing sea levels to rise rapidly, which in turn can lead to widespread flooding and cause massive internet outages.

The most at-risk cities are those closest to sea level.

Sea levels are projected to rise by one foot in the next 15 years, according to the study. The researches predicted that more than 4,000 miles of buried fibre optic cables in the U.S. will be submerged in water by 2033. More than 1,000 data centres, which store servers and routers, could also be damaged.

WATCH: Canada’s melting Arctic ‘major contributor’ to rising sea levels

2017-02-15T22-50-56.1Z--1280x720.jpg

And the cables were not built to withstand that much water.

“All of this equipment is meant to be weather-resistant — but it’s not waterproof,” Paul Barford, University of Wisconsin-Madison professor of computer science and a co-author of the paper told Wired. Much of the system was put into place in the 1990s without much consideration of climate change, he said.

What about Canada?

Fibre optic cable technology is rapidly expanding in major cities across Canada, such as Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver, according to John Clague, professor of Earth Sciences at Simon Fraser University.

“Fibre optic cables transmit huge amounts of data very fast … it trumps cellphone tower technology as it’s more efficient. So a lot of companies are investing in this,” Clague explained.

“We have a reliance on fibre optics technology in Canada. We route them along roads and previous transportation routes, sometimes rail lines.”

cable-and-fibre-in-canada.jpg

Map showing cable and fibre internet service coverage in parts of B.C.

CRTC

And as the sea level continues to rise and storms become more severe, Canadian cities and the internet infrastructure are more prone to flooding.

“Vancouver would be the city most at risk of this type of interruption of internet service,” he said. “You have severe storms in Atlantic Canada and even in Toronto, but you don’t have as much property along shorelines in Halifax as you do in Vancouver. Fibre optic cables could be greatly exposed here.”

READ MORE: Canada in 2050, a land of climate-change extremes at current emissions levels

Clague agreed that rising sea level is a threat to Canada’s infrastructure, but said it may not be as quick as the researchers predicted.

“Rising a foot by 2030, those are extreme values and may be a bit alarmist,” Clague said. “It will probably play out over a longer period of time.”

cable-and-fibre-in-canada-3.jpg

Map showing cable and fibre internet service coverage in parts of parts of Atlantic Canada.

CRTC

What to do about it?

The researchers said the findings show that climate change presents a hazard to communications systems and “steps should be taken soon to develop plans to address this threat.”

But Clague said there may be a lot of pushback before companies replace the internet cables in vulnerable communities.

“To remove and replace these cables, it would be very costly,” he said.


Source: Rising sea levels could knock out the internet within 15 years — here’s how
 
I have spent years building cable and fiber optic systems. Salt water can be murder on the systems. But every foot of buried cable gets wet. There is no way around it. The systems built in the last few years have very little active electronics in the field. What there is can be sealed or raised relatively easily.

Systems are constantly being rebuilt and upgraded. Don't worry about the internet. It will still be there.
 
I have spent years building cable and fiber optic systems. Salt water can be murder on the systems. But every foot of buried cable gets wet. There is no way around it. The systems built in the last few years have very little active electronics in the field. What there is can be sealed or raised relatively easily.

Systems are constantly being rebuilt and upgraded. Don't worry about the internet. It will still be there.
That won’t stop the drowning polar bears from chewing all the cables.
 
Oh noes!

I'll have to go back to getting my porn from the liquor store!
 
That's much reason why Parker Solar Probe needs to be launched, so that they can monitor the sun to reduce this rising sea level to save the earth. advertisement deleted
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Thats much reason why Parker Solar Probe needs to be launched, so that they can monitor the sun to reduce this rising sea level to save the earth. You can safe a sister on paypal for medical bill paypal.me/pools/c/86VCJrI33p
Sending my special fuckoff bitcoins right away.
 
The world is ending ..... What to do ?? ... What to do !!! :)




August 11, 2018 | 5:00 am

Rising sea levels could knock out the internet within 15 years — here’s how

By Katie Dangerfield National Online Journalist, Breaking News Global News

gettyimages-929273422.jpg

Rising sea levels could knock out the internet -- and sooner than scientists thoughts.

Getty Images

Thousands of miles of internet cables zigzagging under coastal cities in the United States could be completely submerged underwater within the next 15 years, a team of researchers has found.

Cities like New York, Miami, Seattle and even coastal regions in Canada, could see rising sea levels destroy a network of cables and data centres that bolsters so much of modern life.

READ MORE: Two Canadian places that could be under water in 100 years — or sooner

Scientists at the University of Oregan and the University of Wisconsin-Madison, presented their study last month in Montreal, saying climate change is causing sea levels to rise rapidly, which in turn can lead to widespread flooding and cause massive internet outages.

The most at-risk cities are those closest to sea level.

Sea levels are projected to rise by one foot in the next 15 years, according to the study. The researches predicted that more than 4,000 miles of buried fibre optic cables in the U.S. will be submerged in water by 2033. More than 1,000 data centres, which store servers and routers, could also be damaged.

WATCH: Canada’s melting Arctic ‘major contributor’ to rising sea levels

2017-02-15T22-50-56.1Z--1280x720.jpg

And the cables were not built to withstand that much water.

“All of this equipment is meant to be weather-resistant — but it’s not waterproof,” Paul Barford, University of Wisconsin-Madison professor of computer science and a co-author of the paper told Wired. Much of the system was put into place in the 1990s without much consideration of climate change, he said.

What about Canada?

Fibre optic cable technology is rapidly expanding in major cities across Canada, such as Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver, according to John Clague, professor of Earth Sciences at Simon Fraser University.

“Fibre optic cables transmit huge amounts of data very fast … it trumps cellphone tower technology as it’s more efficient. So a lot of companies are investing in this,” Clague explained.

“We have a reliance on fibre optics technology in Canada. We route them along roads and previous transportation routes, sometimes rail lines.”

cable-and-fibre-in-canada.jpg

Map showing cable and fibre internet service coverage in parts of B.C.

CRTC

And as the sea level continues to rise and storms become more severe, Canadian cities and the internet infrastructure are more prone to flooding.

“Vancouver would be the city most at risk of this type of interruption of internet service,” he said. “You have severe storms in Atlantic Canada and even in Toronto, but you don’t have as much property along shorelines in Halifax as you do in Vancouver. Fibre optic cables could be greatly exposed here.”

READ MORE: Canada in 2050, a land of climate-change extremes at current emissions levels

Clague agreed that rising sea level is a threat to Canada’s infrastructure, but said it may not be as quick as the researchers predicted.

“Rising a foot by 2030, those are extreme values and may be a bit alarmist,” Clague said. “It will probably play out over a longer period of time.”

cable-and-fibre-in-canada-3.jpg

Map showing cable and fibre internet service coverage in parts of parts of Atlantic Canada.

CRTC

What to do about it?

The researchers said the findings show that climate change presents a hazard to communications systems and “steps should be taken soon to develop plans to address this threat.”

But Clague said there may be a lot of pushback before companies replace the internet cables in vulnerable communities.

“To remove and replace these cables, it would be very costly,” he said.


Source: Rising sea levels could knock out the internet within 15 years — here’s how

In 15 years it'll be internet from satellites, don't worry about it.

Interesting what'll happen in countries like China, if people can simply buy internet from abroad.
 
In 15 years it'll be internet from satellites, don't worry about it.

Actually, satellites are terrible for data communications because of the lag. A telecommunications satellite needs to be in geosynchronous orbit of about 36,000 miles above the equator. This means any transmitted packet has to travel an minimum of 72,000 miles from the source to the satellite and to the destination. The resultant delay is about 560 msec per packet. Compared to 100ms for a ground-based hop.

It wouldn't affect streaming (you wouldn't see the delay). But any interactive Internet application would suffer. A page refresh would take five times longer than you normally see today.

No technology can improve that, it's the law of physics.
 
The world is ending ..... What to do ?? ... What to do !!! :)




August 11, 2018 | 5:00 am

Rising sea levels could knock out the internet within 15 years — here’s how

By Katie Dangerfield National Online Journalist, Breaking News Global News

gettyimages-929273422.jpg

Rising sea levels could knock out the internet -- and sooner than scientists thoughts.

Getty Images

Thousands of miles of internet cables zigzagging under coastal cities in the United States could be completely submerged underwater within the next 15 years, a team of researchers has found.

Cities like New York, Miami, Seattle and even coastal regions in Canada, could see rising sea levels destroy a network of cables and data centres that bolsters so much of modern life.

READ MORE: Two Canadian places that could be under water in 100 years — or sooner

Scientists at the University of Oregan and the University of Wisconsin-Madison, presented their study last month in Montreal, saying climate change is causing sea levels to rise rapidly, which in turn can lead to widespread flooding and cause massive internet outages.

The most at-risk cities are those closest to sea level.

Sea levels are projected to rise by one foot in the next 15 years, according to the study. The researches predicted that more than 4,000 miles of buried fibre optic cables in the U.S. will be submerged in water by 2033. More than 1,000 data centres, which store servers and routers, could also be damaged.

WATCH: Canada’s melting Arctic ‘major contributor’ to rising sea levels

2017-02-15T22-50-56.1Z--1280x720.jpg

And the cables were not built to withstand that much water.

“All of this equipment is meant to be weather-resistant — but it’s not waterproof,” Paul Barford, University of Wisconsin-Madison professor of computer science and a co-author of the paper told Wired. Much of the system was put into place in the 1990s without much consideration of climate change, he said.

What about Canada?

Fibre optic cable technology is rapidly expanding in major cities across Canada, such as Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver, according to John Clague, professor of Earth Sciences at Simon Fraser University.

“Fibre optic cables transmit huge amounts of data very fast … it trumps cellphone tower technology as it’s more efficient. So a lot of companies are investing in this,” Clague explained.

“We have a reliance on fibre optics technology in Canada. We route them along roads and previous transportation routes, sometimes rail lines.”

cable-and-fibre-in-canada.jpg

Map showing cable and fibre internet service coverage in parts of B.C.

CRTC

And as the sea level continues to rise and storms become more severe, Canadian cities and the internet infrastructure are more prone to flooding.

“Vancouver would be the city most at risk of this type of interruption of internet service,” he said. “You have severe storms in Atlantic Canada and even in Toronto, but you don’t have as much property along shorelines in Halifax as you do in Vancouver. Fibre optic cables could be greatly exposed here.”

READ MORE: Canada in 2050, a land of climate-change extremes at current emissions levels

Clague agreed that rising sea level is a threat to Canada’s infrastructure, but said it may not be as quick as the researchers predicted.

“Rising a foot by 2030, those are extreme values and may be a bit alarmist,” Clague said. “It will probably play out over a longer period of time.”

cable-and-fibre-in-canada-3.jpg

Map showing cable and fibre internet service coverage in parts of parts of Atlantic Canada.

CRTC

What to do about it?

The researchers said the findings show that climate change presents a hazard to communications systems and “steps should be taken soon to develop plans to address this threat.”

But Clague said there may be a lot of pushback before companies replace the internet cables in vulnerable communities.

“To remove and replace these cables, it would be very costly,” he said.


Source: Rising sea levels could knock out the internet within 15 years — here’s how

In 15 years it'll be internet from satellites, don't worry about it.

Interesting what'll happen in countries like China, if people can simply buy internet from abroad.
World internet can happen easily via satellites in less than 15 years. With high speed data transfer faster than fiber no.
 
The world is ending ..... What to do ?? ... What to do !!! :)




August 11, 2018 | 5:00 am

Rising sea levels could knock out the internet within 15 years — here’s how

By Katie Dangerfield National Online Journalist, Breaking News Global News

gettyimages-929273422.jpg

Rising sea levels could knock out the internet -- and sooner than scientists thoughts.

Getty Images

Thousands of miles of internet cables zigzagging under coastal cities in the United States could be completely submerged underwater within the next 15 years, a team of researchers has found.

Cities like New York, Miami, Seattle and even coastal regions in Canada, could see rising sea levels destroy a network of cables and data centres that bolsters so much of modern life.

READ MORE: Two Canadian places that could be under water in 100 years — or sooner

Scientists at the University of Oregan and the University of Wisconsin-Madison, presented their study last month in Montreal, saying climate change is causing sea levels to rise rapidly, which in turn can lead to widespread flooding and cause massive internet outages.

The most at-risk cities are those closest to sea level.

Sea levels are projected to rise by one foot in the next 15 years, according to the study. The researches predicted that more than 4,000 miles of buried fibre optic cables in the U.S. will be submerged in water by 2033. More than 1,000 data centres, which store servers and routers, could also be damaged.

WATCH: Canada’s melting Arctic ‘major contributor’ to rising sea levels

2017-02-15T22-50-56.1Z--1280x720.jpg

And the cables were not built to withstand that much water.

“All of this equipment is meant to be weather-resistant — but it’s not waterproof,” Paul Barford, University of Wisconsin-Madison professor of computer science and a co-author of the paper told Wired. Much of the system was put into place in the 1990s without much consideration of climate change, he said.

What about Canada?

Fibre optic cable technology is rapidly expanding in major cities across Canada, such as Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver, according to John Clague, professor of Earth Sciences at Simon Fraser University.

“Fibre optic cables transmit huge amounts of data very fast … it trumps cellphone tower technology as it’s more efficient. So a lot of companies are investing in this,” Clague explained.

“We have a reliance on fibre optics technology in Canada. We route them along roads and previous transportation routes, sometimes rail lines.”

cable-and-fibre-in-canada.jpg

Map showing cable and fibre internet service coverage in parts of B.C.

CRTC

And as the sea level continues to rise and storms become more severe, Canadian cities and the internet infrastructure are more prone to flooding.

“Vancouver would be the city most at risk of this type of interruption of internet service,” he said. “You have severe storms in Atlantic Canada and even in Toronto, but you don’t have as much property along shorelines in Halifax as you do in Vancouver. Fibre optic cables could be greatly exposed here.”

READ MORE: Canada in 2050, a land of climate-change extremes at current emissions levels

Clague agreed that rising sea level is a threat to Canada’s infrastructure, but said it may not be as quick as the researchers predicted.

“Rising a foot by 2030, those are extreme values and may be a bit alarmist,” Clague said. “It will probably play out over a longer period of time.”

cable-and-fibre-in-canada-3.jpg

Map showing cable and fibre internet service coverage in parts of parts of Atlantic Canada.

CRTC

What to do about it?

The researchers said the findings show that climate change presents a hazard to communications systems and “steps should be taken soon to develop plans to address this threat.”

But Clague said there may be a lot of pushback before companies replace the internet cables in vulnerable communities.

“To remove and replace these cables, it would be very costly,” he said.


Source: Rising sea levels could knock out the internet within 15 years — here’s how

In 15 years it'll be internet from satellites, don't worry about it.

Interesting what'll happen in countries like China, if people can simply buy internet from abroad.
World internet can happen easily via satellites in less than 15 years. With high speed data transfer faster than fiber no.

It doesn't need to be faster. It just needs to happen.

How fast do you think internet is in China? Slower than rural internet in the US.
 
Hey talk to AlGore. He invented the fucking internet and also put out fucking documentaries about rising sea levels. If he didn't build that shit into his internet infrastructure then he's a fucking moron because even he doesn't believe his own bullshit.
 
In 15 years it'll be internet from satellites, don't worry about it.

Actually, satellites are terrible for data communications because of the lag. A telecommunications satellite needs to be in geosynchronous orbit of about 36,000 miles above the equator. This means any transmitted packet has to travel an minimum of 72,000 miles from the source to the satellite and to the destination. The resultant delay is about 560 msec per packet. Compared to 100ms for a ground-based hop.

It wouldn't affect streaming (you wouldn't see the delay). But any interactive Internet application would suffer. A page refresh would take five times longer than you normally see today.

No technology can improve that, it's the law of physics.
Nailed it. Satellite will never be fast with current technology. That said global satellite internet isn't a bad idea either. It just won't be high speed.
 
The world is ending ..... What to do ?? ... What to do !!! :)




August 11, 2018 | 5:00 am

Rising sea levels could knock out the internet within 15 years — here’s how

By Katie Dangerfield National Online Journalist, Breaking News Global News

gettyimages-929273422.jpg

Rising sea levels could knock out the internet -- and sooner than scientists thoughts.

Getty Images

Thousands of miles of internet cables zigzagging under coastal cities in the United States could be completely submerged underwater within the next 15 years, a team of researchers has found.

Cities like New York, Miami, Seattle and even coastal regions in Canada, could see rising sea levels destroy a network of cables and data centres that bolsters so much of modern life.

READ MORE: Two Canadian places that could be under water in 100 years — or sooner

Scientists at the University of Oregan and the University of Wisconsin-Madison, presented their study last month in Montreal, saying climate change is causing sea levels to rise rapidly, which in turn can lead to widespread flooding and cause massive internet outages.

The most at-risk cities are those closest to sea level.

Sea levels are projected to rise by one foot in the next 15 years, according to the study. The researches predicted that more than 4,000 miles of buried fibre optic cables in the U.S. will be submerged in water by 2033. More than 1,000 data centres, which store servers and routers, could also be damaged.

WATCH: Canada’s melting Arctic ‘major contributor’ to rising sea levels

2017-02-15T22-50-56.1Z--1280x720.jpg

And the cables were not built to withstand that much water.

“All of this equipment is meant to be weather-resistant — but it’s not waterproof,” Paul Barford, University of Wisconsin-Madison professor of computer science and a co-author of the paper told Wired. Much of the system was put into place in the 1990s without much consideration of climate change, he said.

What about Canada?

Fibre optic cable technology is rapidly expanding in major cities across Canada, such as Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver, according to John Clague, professor of Earth Sciences at Simon Fraser University.

“Fibre optic cables transmit huge amounts of data very fast … it trumps cellphone tower technology as it’s more efficient. So a lot of companies are investing in this,” Clague explained.

“We have a reliance on fibre optics technology in Canada. We route them along roads and previous transportation routes, sometimes rail lines.”

cable-and-fibre-in-canada.jpg

Map showing cable and fibre internet service coverage in parts of B.C.

CRTC

And as the sea level continues to rise and storms become more severe, Canadian cities and the internet infrastructure are more prone to flooding.

“Vancouver would be the city most at risk of this type of interruption of internet service,” he said. “You have severe storms in Atlantic Canada and even in Toronto, but you don’t have as much property along shorelines in Halifax as you do in Vancouver. Fibre optic cables could be greatly exposed here.”

READ MORE: Canada in 2050, a land of climate-change extremes at current emissions levels

Clague agreed that rising sea level is a threat to Canada’s infrastructure, but said it may not be as quick as the researchers predicted.

“Rising a foot by 2030, those are extreme values and may be a bit alarmist,” Clague said. “It will probably play out over a longer period of time.”

cable-and-fibre-in-canada-3.jpg

Map showing cable and fibre internet service coverage in parts of parts of Atlantic Canada.

CRTC

What to do about it?

The researchers said the findings show that climate change presents a hazard to communications systems and “steps should be taken soon to develop plans to address this threat.”

But Clague said there may be a lot of pushback before companies replace the internet cables in vulnerable communities.

“To remove and replace these cables, it would be very costly,” he said.


Source: Rising sea levels could knock out the internet within 15 years — here’s how

In 15 years it'll be internet from satellites, don't worry about it.

Interesting what'll happen in countries like China, if people can simply buy internet from abroad.
World internet can happen easily via satellites in less than 15 years. With high speed data transfer faster than fiber no.

It doesn't need to be faster. It just needs to happen.

How fast do you think internet is in China? Slower than rural internet in the US.
It's a worthy endeavor, just noting the limitations. fncceo explained it.
 
The world is ending ..... What to do ?? ... What to do !!! :)




August 11, 2018 | 5:00 am

Rising sea levels could knock out the internet within 15 years — here’s how

By Katie Dangerfield National Online Journalist, Breaking News Global News

gettyimages-929273422.jpg

Rising sea levels could knock out the internet -- and sooner than scientists thoughts.

Getty Images

Thousands of miles of internet cables zigzagging under coastal cities in the United States could be completely submerged underwater within the next 15 years, a team of researchers has found.

Cities like New York, Miami, Seattle and even coastal regions in Canada, could see rising sea levels destroy a network of cables and data centres that bolsters so much of modern life.

READ MORE: Two Canadian places that could be under water in 100 years — or sooner

Scientists at the University of Oregan and the University of Wisconsin-Madison, presented their study last month in Montreal, saying climate change is causing sea levels to rise rapidly, which in turn can lead to widespread flooding and cause massive internet outages.

The most at-risk cities are those closest to sea level.

Sea levels are projected to rise by one foot in the next 15 years, according to the study. The researches predicted that more than 4,000 miles of buried fibre optic cables in the U.S. will be submerged in water by 2033. More than 1,000 data centres, which store servers and routers, could also be damaged.

WATCH: Canada’s melting Arctic ‘major contributor’ to rising sea levels

2017-02-15T22-50-56.1Z--1280x720.jpg

And the cables were not built to withstand that much water.

“All of this equipment is meant to be weather-resistant — but it’s not waterproof,” Paul Barford, University of Wisconsin-Madison professor of computer science and a co-author of the paper told Wired. Much of the system was put into place in the 1990s without much consideration of climate change, he said.

What about Canada?

Fibre optic cable technology is rapidly expanding in major cities across Canada, such as Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver, according to John Clague, professor of Earth Sciences at Simon Fraser University.

“Fibre optic cables transmit huge amounts of data very fast … it trumps cellphone tower technology as it’s more efficient. So a lot of companies are investing in this,” Clague explained.

“We have a reliance on fibre optics technology in Canada. We route them along roads and previous transportation routes, sometimes rail lines.”

cable-and-fibre-in-canada.jpg

Map showing cable and fibre internet service coverage in parts of B.C.

CRTC

And as the sea level continues to rise and storms become more severe, Canadian cities and the internet infrastructure are more prone to flooding.

“Vancouver would be the city most at risk of this type of interruption of internet service,” he said. “You have severe storms in Atlantic Canada and even in Toronto, but you don’t have as much property along shorelines in Halifax as you do in Vancouver. Fibre optic cables could be greatly exposed here.”

READ MORE: Canada in 2050, a land of climate-change extremes at current emissions levels

Clague agreed that rising sea level is a threat to Canada’s infrastructure, but said it may not be as quick as the researchers predicted.

“Rising a foot by 2030, those are extreme values and may be a bit alarmist,” Clague said. “It will probably play out over a longer period of time.”

cable-and-fibre-in-canada-3.jpg

Map showing cable and fibre internet service coverage in parts of parts of Atlantic Canada.

CRTC

What to do about it?

The researchers said the findings show that climate change presents a hazard to communications systems and “steps should be taken soon to develop plans to address this threat.”

But Clague said there may be a lot of pushback before companies replace the internet cables in vulnerable communities.

“To remove and replace these cables, it would be very costly,” he said.


Source: Rising sea levels could knock out the internet within 15 years — here’s how

In 15 years it'll be internet from satellites, don't worry about it.

Interesting what'll happen in countries like China, if people can simply buy internet from abroad.
World internet can happen easily via satellites in less than 15 years. With high speed data transfer faster than fiber no.

It doesn't need to be faster. It just needs to happen.

How fast do you think internet is in China? Slower than rural internet in the US.

Actually, China has very fast Internet access. There are currently more than a dozen fiber optic undersea cable connections between China, the US, and other Asian countries. China has made significant investment in fiberoptic transport throughout their country, even to rural areas, with four major internet backbones spanning the country.
 
Last edited:
Well, since All Gore was telling us that we'd be underwater long before now it's rather swell isn't it, lol. Perhaps one should exercise a little bit of objectivity and take with a 'grain of salt' the vast majority of economically, financially motivated cadre of 'warmists' & special interest lobbyists out there. Start with boning up on the Vostok ice core samples. Do you realize that globalism and the tenets of 'one world governance' "George Soros-ism" is directly tied into this global warming industry... How many more Solyndra-esque conglomerates will get propped up by our tax dollars to, in short order, be dismantled without a trace of our invested billions to ever be seen again...?
 
The world is ending ..... What to do ?? ... What to do !!! :)




August 11, 2018 | 5:00 am

Rising sea levels could knock out the internet within 15 years — here’s how

By Katie Dangerfield National Online Journalist, Breaking News Global News

gettyimages-929273422.jpg

Rising sea levels could knock out the internet -- and sooner than scientists thoughts.

Getty Images

Thousands of miles of internet cables zigzagging under coastal cities in the United States could be completely submerged underwater within the next 15 years, a team of researchers has found.

Cities like New York, Miami, Seattle and even coastal regions in Canada, could see rising sea levels destroy a network of cables and data centres that bolsters so much of modern life.

READ MORE: Two Canadian places that could be under water in 100 years — or sooner

Scientists at the University of Oregan and the University of Wisconsin-Madison, presented their study last month in Montreal, saying climate change is causing sea levels to rise rapidly, which in turn can lead to widespread flooding and cause massive internet outages.

The most at-risk cities are those closest to sea level.

Sea levels are projected to rise by one foot in the next 15 years, according to the study. The researches predicted that more than 4,000 miles of buried fibre optic cables in the U.S. will be submerged in water by 2033. More than 1,000 data centres, which store servers and routers, could also be damaged.

WATCH: Canada’s melting Arctic ‘major contributor’ to rising sea levels

2017-02-15T22-50-56.1Z--1280x720.jpg

And the cables were not built to withstand that much water.

“All of this equipment is meant to be weather-resistant — but it’s not waterproof,” Paul Barford, University of Wisconsin-Madison professor of computer science and a co-author of the paper told Wired. Much of the system was put into place in the 1990s without much consideration of climate change, he said.

What about Canada?

Fibre optic cable technology is rapidly expanding in major cities across Canada, such as Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver, according to John Clague, professor of Earth Sciences at Simon Fraser University.

“Fibre optic cables transmit huge amounts of data very fast … it trumps cellphone tower technology as it’s more efficient. So a lot of companies are investing in this,” Clague explained.

“We have a reliance on fibre optics technology in Canada. We route them along roads and previous transportation routes, sometimes rail lines.”

cable-and-fibre-in-canada.jpg

Map showing cable and fibre internet service coverage in parts of B.C.

CRTC

And as the sea level continues to rise and storms become more severe, Canadian cities and the internet infrastructure are more prone to flooding.

“Vancouver would be the city most at risk of this type of interruption of internet service,” he said. “You have severe storms in Atlantic Canada and even in Toronto, but you don’t have as much property along shorelines in Halifax as you do in Vancouver. Fibre optic cables could be greatly exposed here.”

READ MORE: Canada in 2050, a land of climate-change extremes at current emissions levels

Clague agreed that rising sea level is a threat to Canada’s infrastructure, but said it may not be as quick as the researchers predicted.

“Rising a foot by 2030, those are extreme values and may be a bit alarmist,” Clague said. “It will probably play out over a longer period of time.”

cable-and-fibre-in-canada-3.jpg

Map showing cable and fibre internet service coverage in parts of parts of Atlantic Canada.

CRTC

What to do about it?

The researchers said the findings show that climate change presents a hazard to communications systems and “steps should be taken soon to develop plans to address this threat.”

But Clague said there may be a lot of pushback before companies replace the internet cables in vulnerable communities.

“To remove and replace these cables, it would be very costly,” he said.


Source: Rising sea levels could knock out the internet within 15 years — here’s how

In 15 years it'll be internet from satellites, don't worry about it.

Interesting what'll happen in countries like China, if people can simply buy internet from abroad.
World internet can happen easily via satellites in less than 15 years. With high speed data transfer faster than fiber no.

It doesn't need to be faster. It just needs to happen.

How fast do you think internet is in China? Slower than rural internet in the US.

Actually, China has very fast Internet access. There are currently more than a dozen fiber optic undersea cable connections between China, the US, and other Asian countries. China has made significant investment in fiberoptic transport throughout their country, even to rural areas with four major internet backbones spanning the country.
Europe as well. The US is lagging, although it is a big country. I'm out in the sticks but have cable internet, I made sure before I moved. I have friends that have to tether cell phones
 
Well, since All Gore was telling us that we'd be underwater long before now it's rather swell isn't it, lol. Perhaps one should exercise a little bit of objectivity and take with a 'grain of salt' the vast majority of economically, financially motivated cadre of 'warmists' & special interest lobbyists out there. Start with boning up on the Vostok ice core samples. Do you realize that globalism and the tenets of 'one world governance' "George Soros-ism" is directly tied into this global warming industry... How many more Solyndra-esque conglomerates will get propped up by our tax dollars to, in short order, be dismantled without a trace of our invested billions to ever be seen again...?
George Soros pays me every week its great, you are missing out.
 

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