Landing Point · CA Canada
| Cable | Status |
|---|---|
| Connected Coast | Active |
RTT measurements to this landing point from 2026-04-11 through 2026-07-11 - 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 | 2 | 183.3 ms |
| #7062 own probe | Cape Town ZA | 2 | 245.5 ms |
| #1014473 own probe | Minsk BY | 2 | 137.4 ms |
| #1015523 own probe | Moscow RU | 2 | 144.8 ms |
| #1016031 own probe | Kyiv UA | 2 | 145.3 ms |
| #1014589 own probe | Almaty KZ | 1 | 163.4 ms |
| #1014597 own probe | Tbilisi GE | 1 | 130.7 ms |
| #1014969 own probe | Jerusalem IL | 1 | 130.2 ms |
| #1015563 own probe | Saint Petersburg RU | 1 | 196.3 ms |
Port Neville is a locality situated on the north side of Johnstone Strait in the Central Coast region of British Columbia, Canada. As a landing point on this sheltered inlet, it forms part of the broader network of submarine cable infrastructure that spans Canadian coastal waters. One submarine cable lands at Port Neville, connecting it to other communities within Canada.
The single cable serving Port Neville is the Connected Coast system, a domestic cable designed to extend connectivity along British Columbia's coast and to remote communities across the country. Because all endpoints on this cable are within Canada, the corridor it enables is entirely domestic in nature, focused on intra-national regional and inter-community connectivity rather than intercontinental links.
Connected Coast is the submarine cable landing at Port Neville. It reached ready-for-service status in 2024 and is currently listed in draft status. The cable connects multiple landing points within Canada, making Port Neville one of several Canadian stops along a system designed to serve coastal and remote communities across the country.
Within Canada's submarine cable landscape, Port Neville serves as a single-cable landing point, placing it alongside Addenbroke Island, BC, as one of the more modestly served landing points in the country. Other Canadian landing points such as Vancouver, Prince Rupert, Halifax, Kangiqsujuaq, and Puvirnituq each host two cables, giving them somewhat broader connectivity within the national network. Canada as a whole counts 21 submarine cables landing across 155 landing points, and Port Neville's single-cable presence is representative of the many smaller, community-focused stops that collectively make up the majority of that infrastructure.
Port Neville functions as a single-cable terminus on the Connected Coast system, rather than as a multi-cable hub. Its role is oriented toward extending domestic submarine connectivity into a part of British Columbia's coast that would otherwise be served only by terrestrial or aerial routes, if at all. The Connected Coast cable ties Port Neville into a chain of Canadian landing points, enabling data transmission along the Johnstone Strait corridor and integrating this small locality into the national submarine cable graph.
In the broader picture of Canada's 155 submarine cable landing points, Port Neville represents the pattern of single-cable domestic stops that together give the Connected Coast system its geographic reach along the British Columbia coastline. The presence of even one submarine cable at a remote locality like Port Neville illustrates how domestic submarine systems can extend network access to communities where overland infrastructure is limited.
What next: Port Neville, BC, Canada in the global directory of cable landing points; see surrounding routes on the interactive submarine cable map or follow live network monitoring.
View actual submarine cable routing from Port Neville, BC, Canada - with backbone nodes, distance calculations, and latency estimates
Open Calculator →