Landing Point · US United States
| Cable | Status |
|---|---|
| Airraq | Active |
Eek is a coastal community in Alaska, United States, and serves as a submarine cable landing point connecting it to the broader domestic cable network. One submarine cable lands here, the Airraq system, which links Eek to other points within the United States. As an intra-national cable corridor, the Airraq system supports domestic connectivity along the Alaskan coast rather than intercontinental routes.
Alaska's remote coastal communities depend on submarine cable infrastructure to bridge geographic distances that make terrestrial alternatives impractical. Eek's participation in the Airraq cable system positions it within that network of Alaskan connectivity, enabling data and communications links between communities that would otherwise be difficult to serve.
Airraq is a submarine cable measuring 680 kilometres in length, with a scheduled ready-for-service date of 2025. The system is currently in draft status. All endpoints on the Airraq cable are located within the United States, making it a domestic cable serving communities along its route. The cable's relatively short length is consistent with a regional intra-Alaskan system designed to connect remote communities across coastal waters.
Within the United States, which hosts 113 submarine cables across 160 landing points, Eek ranks among the single-cable landing points in the country. Major United States landing hubs such as Boca Raton, FL, and San Juan, PR, each host eight cables, while Hermosa Beach, CA, Kapolei, HI, and Myrtle Beach, SC, each host five. Eek's single-cable profile reflects its role as a community-focused terminus rather than a large international gateway.
Eek, AK, functions as a single-cable terminus on the domestic Airraq system, a relatively short 680-kilometre cable operating entirely within the United States. This configuration is characteristic of Alaskan coastal landing points, where submarine cables serve as the primary means of delivering connectivity to communities separated by large stretches of water and difficult terrain. The Airraq cable, once it reaches its 2025 ready-for-service date, will extend a domestic network link to Eek alongside other United States endpoints on the same system.
Within the broader United States submarine cable graph, single-cable landing points such as Eek represent the outer edges of the network, where infrastructure investment is directed toward serving specific remote communities. The existence of a dedicated cable landing here underscores that domestic submarine systems extend well beyond the major international hubs concentrated on the continental coasts and island territories.
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