Landing Point · CA Canada
| Cable | Status |
|---|---|
| EAUFON 2 | Active |
Ivujivik is a northern village in Nunavik, Quebec, and the northernmost settlement in any Canadian province. Its position on the coast of Hudson Strait places it at a geographically remote point of Canada's submarine cable network. One submarine cable lands at Ivujivik, connecting it to other points within Canada and making it a notable node in the expanding effort to bring subsea connectivity to Arctic and subarctic communities.
The single cable serving Ivujivik is EAUFON 2, a regional domestic cable that links Canadian communities along a northern corridor. With a total length of 675 kilometres, EAUFON 2 was registered as ready for service in 2024, on a draft basis, making Ivujivik one of the more recently connected submarine cable landing points in the country. The cable's endpoints remain entirely within Canada, positioning this link as a domestic inter-community connection rather than an intercontinental route.
EAUFON 2 is a 675-kilometre submarine cable with a ready-for-service date of 2024 (draft). All endpoints on this cable are located within Canada, making it a domestic regional system. It serves as a direct subsea link between Ivujivik and other Canadian communities, providing a fixed-infrastructure alternative to terrestrial or satellite connectivity in a region where laying overland cables is impractical. Ivujivik is one of the terminal points on this system.
Within Canada's submarine cable landscape, which spans 21 cables across 155 landing points, Ivujivik hosts a single cable and ranks in the top 97 percent of Canadian landing points by cable count. It shares the single-cable tier with Addenbroke Island in British Columbia, while nearby Nunavik peers such as Kangiqsujuaq and Puvirnituq each host two cables, suggesting those communities benefit from a degree of redundancy that Ivujivik currently does not. Halifax, Prince Rupert, and Vancouver also host two cables each, reflecting the greater connectivity typical of more southerly or commercially active Canadian coastal points.
Ivujivik functions as a single-cable terminus rather than a multi-cable hub. Its connection via EAUFON 2 provides a subsea link running entirely within Canadian territory, enabling domestic regional connectivity along a northern coastal corridor. Given the village's population of approximately 412 and its status as the northernmost settlement in any Canadian province, the presence of a submarine cable landing here reflects a broader effort to extend fixed subsea infrastructure into remote Nunavik communities.
In the broader Canadian submarine cable graph, Ivujivik represents the extension of domestic subsea connectivity toward the country's geographic extremes, demonstrating that submarine cables in Canada serve not only international data exchange but also the connectivity needs of small and isolated northern settlements.
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