Wikipedia
WASACE was a planned system of submarine communications cables consisting of four sections with a total length of 29,000 km linking four continents.
Original proposal:
- WASACE North, from Spain to the United States
- WASACE South, from Brazil to Nigeria
- WASACE America, from Brazil to North America.
- WASACE Africa, from Nigeria via Angola to South Africa
WASACE Africa would potentially be the fifth cable running from South Africa to Nigeria.
WASACE South would be the third cable linking Latin America to Africa, and would compete on a direct route from Africa to Brazil with the planned South Atlantic Express (SAEx) cable. The first cable from Latin America to Africa is the Atlantis-2 cable which runs from Brazil to Portugal via Cape Verde and Senegal.
The WASACE system will focus on developing new routes from Africa to Latin America and the US. The Company says that it will be offering two of the major international capacity routes and enabling three new underdeveloped direct traffic routes: Africa to the US, Africa to Latin America and Latin America to Europe. The key part of the project however is a link from Africa to the USA via Brazil, which offers an alternative routing to North America that does not need to travel via Europe and the North Atlantic. It also has the potential to deliver connectivity from Asia to the US via Africa and Latin America as an alternative to Europe or the Pacific. Further WASACE is planned to be connected to the SEACOM cable system which runs on the East coast of Africa and branches to India and Europe.
The project is headed by WASACE Cable Company Worldwide Holding and project development will be managed by US-based David Ross Group. The company intends to get all four cables built by the end of the first quarter of 2014, prior to the FIFA World Cup that will take place summer 2014 in Brazil. Submarine cable vendors are planned to be select in Q1 2012 and a supplier contract will be signed Q2 2012.
WASCASE Cable Company Worldwide holding was originally formed to meet the increasing needs of the developing markets in the Global South.