EAC-C2C

EAC-C2C is a submarine telecommunications cable system interconnecting several countries in Asia, the Pacific, and the United States.

It is a merger of the former EAC (East Asia Crossing) and C2C cable systems.

[1] The merger occurred in 2007 by Asia Netcom, and the cable system is now owned/operated by Pacnet.

The EAC portion of the cable system includes: Landing points: Length: 19,500 kilometers Capacity: 160 Gbit/s - upgradeable to 2.5 Tbit/s Technology: DWDM (dense wavelength-division multiplex) The C2C portion of the cable system comprises three rings: The landing points on each ring are as follows: In 2007, Asia Netcom (now Pacnet) merged the EAC cable system and the C2C cable system into a single EAC-C2C cable system, spanning 36,800 kilometers between Japan, Korea, China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, the Philippines and Singapore, connecting 17 cable landing stations.

EAC-C2C cable system becomes the most resilient submarine network in Asia region.

Entire C2C Network