Landing Point · BR Brazil
| Cable | Status |
|---|---|
| Norte Conectado (Infovia 05) | Planned |
Borba is a landing point in Brazil that participates in the country's domestic submarine cable network. As a location served by submarine cable infrastructure, Borba connects to the broader Brazilian coastal and inland connectivity framework. One submarine cable lands at Borba, linking it to other points within Brazil and enabling domestic data transmission through an underwater route.
The single cable serving Borba, Norte Conectado (Infovia 05), is a domestic cable, meaning all of its endpoints lie within Brazil. This gives Borba a role in intra-national submarine connectivity rather than international or intercontinental links. The corridor enabled by this cable is therefore a Brazil-to-Brazil one, supporting national network reach across what is geographically one of the largest countries in the world.
Norte Conectado (Infovia 05) is the sole submarine cable landing at Borba. Currently listed as a draft project, this cable connects multiple landing points within Brazil, making it a domestic submarine cable system. All other countries on this cable are also Brazil, confirming its role as an intra-national link. No length or RFS year has been confirmed for this system at this stage of its development.
Within Brazil's submarine cable landscape, Borba is a single-cable landing point in a country that hosts 22 submarine cables across 64 landing points. Major Brazilian hubs such as Fortaleza (10 cables), Rio de Janeiro (8 cables), and Santos (5 cables) handle significantly higher volumes of cable traffic, while Borba sits closer in scale to landing points such as Autazes, which hosts 2 cables. With one cable, Borba ranks in the top 81% of Brazil's 74 landing points by cable count, reflecting that single-cable landing points are common across the country's broad submarine network geography.
Borba functions as a single-cable terminus within Brazil's domestic submarine cable network. Its connection via Norte Conectado (Infovia 05) places it on a corridor that runs entirely within Brazilian territory, contributing to national rather than international data routing. As a draft-stage project, the cable's full specifications and operational timeline remain to be confirmed, but its inclusion extends submarine cable reach into a part of Brazil that is not served by the country's larger multi-cable hubs.
In the broader Brazilian submarine cable graph, Borba represents the extension of domestic connectivity to inland and less-served coastal areas, adding a node to a national network that spans 64 landing points and continues to grow through projects such as Norte Conectado.
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