Landing Point · US United States
| Cable | Status |
|---|---|
| Nome to Homer Express (NTHE) | Planned |
Hooper Bay is a city located in the Kusilvak Census Area of Alaska, United States, situated along the state's western coastline. As a submarine cable landing point, it is the designated terminus for one submarine cable system currently in development. The cable landing here forms part of a domestic United States corridor, linking communities within Alaska rather than connecting to foreign nations.
The single cable system scheduled to land at Hooper Bay is the Nome to Homer Express (NTHE), a domestic Alaskan cable project. This system positions Hooper Bay as one of several communities along an intra-Alaskan submarine route, enabling improved connectivity across remote coastal settlements that are difficult to serve through terrestrial infrastructure.
The Nome to Homer Express (NTHE) is a submarine cable system with a total length of 1,545 km, currently in draft status with a projected ready-for-service (RFS) year of 2027. The cable connects multiple landing points entirely within the United States, linking communities across Alaska. As an intra-national system, all of its endpoints fall within U.S. territory, making it a domestic cable designed to serve the connectivity needs of Alaskan communities, including Hooper Bay.
Within the broader landscape of United States submarine cable infrastructure — which spans 113 cables across 160 landing points — Hooper Bay hosts a single cable system and ranks in the top 69% of American landing points by cable count. High-volume U.S. landing points 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. Hooper Bay's profile reflects its role as a domestic, regionally focused landing point serving a remote Alaskan community rather than a major international gateway.
Hooper Bay functions as a single-cable terminus on the planned NTHE system, a domestic submarine cable designed to improve connectivity across Alaska's western and southern coastal communities. The 1,545 km cable creates a submarine link between remote Alaskan locations that would otherwise depend on alternative and potentially less reliable connectivity options. With an anticipated RFS date of 2027, Hooper Bay's role in this system is forward-looking rather than currently active.
In the regional submarine cable graph, Hooper Bay represents the model of a focused, single-system domestic landing point — illustrating how submarine cable infrastructure extends connectivity not only across oceans but also along the coastlines of geographically challenging and sparsely populated regions within a single country.
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