Landing Point · CA Canada
| Cable | Status |
|---|---|
| Connected Coast | Active |
RTT measurements to this landing point from 2026-07-11 through 2026-07-12 - live ICMP round-trip time via our monitoring probes. Recomputed daily. ✓ No anomalies detected in the monitored period.
| Probe | Location | Samples | Avg |
|---|---|---|---|
| #6487 own probe | Singapore SG | 3 | 198.2 ms |
| #7062 own probe | Cape Town ZA | 3 | 216.6 ms |
| #1014473 own probe | Minsk BY | 3 | 106.9 ms |
| #1015523 own probe | Moscow RU | 3 | 106.3 ms |
| #1015563 own probe | Saint Petersburg RU | 3 | 100.9 ms |
| #1016031 own probe | Kyiv UA | 2 | 109.6 ms |

Alert Bay is a village located on Cormorant Island, off the northeastern coast of Vancouver Island, in the Regional District of Mount Waddington, British Columbia, Canada. As an island community, it relies on submarine cable connectivity to maintain telecommunications links with the broader provincial and national network. One submarine cable currently lands at Alert Bay, making it part of Canada's distributed coastal cable infrastructure.
The single cable serving Alert Bay is the Connected Coast system, which connects multiple landing points within Canada. Because all endpoints on this cable are domestic, Connected Coast functions as an intra-national, regionally focused submarine cable rather than an intercontinental link. For an island community like Alert Bay, this type of regional cable provides the physical layer of fixed connectivity that overland routes cannot easily supply.
The Connected Coast cable reached ready-for-service status in 2024, making it a recently completed addition to Canada's submarine cable network. The cable connects landing points exclusively within Canada, linking Alert Bay to other coastal and island communities across British Columbia and beyond. No cable length or additional technical specifications are recorded for this system at this landing point.
Within Canada's submarine cable landscape, Alert Bay sits among a set of landing points serving British Columbia's coast. Larger hubs in the province, such as Vancouver and Prince Rupert, each host two cables, while Alert Bay shares its single-cable status with nearby Addenbroke Island. Across Canada as a whole, 21 submarine cables land at 155 points, and Alert Bay's count of one cable places it among the majority of Canadian landing points, which individually serve local or regional connectivity needs rather than acting as multi-cable interchange nodes.
Alert Bay functions as a single-cable terminus on the Connected Coast system, serving the island community of Cormorant Island with a domestic submarine link that came into service in 2024. The Connected Coast cable's all-Canadian endpoint configuration means that Alert Bay's role in the submarine cable graph is oriented toward intra-provincial and national coastal connectivity, rather than toward international traffic exchange.
In a country where 155 landing points collectively support coastal and remote communities across an expansive coastline, Alert Bay represents the pattern most common in Canada's submarine cable geography: a single connection threading a geographically isolated community into the broader national network. Its presence on the Connected Coast system reflects the broader effort to extend fixed submarine infrastructure to island and coastal communities in British Columbia that are difficult to reach by terrestrial means.
What next: Alert Bay, BC, Canada in the global directory of cable landing points; see surrounding routes on the interactive submarine cable map or follow live network monitoring.
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