Business

US funding tapped for Pacific undersea cable after China rebuffed

Federated States of Micronesia to use American funds to construct line between 2 of its 4 states, sources say

Updated 2 years ago · Published on 03 Sep 2021 4:30PM

US funding tapped for Pacific undersea cable after China rebuffed
A view of Kolonia, the Federated States of Micronesia. While FSM has close ties to the US, it also has long-standing diplomatic and trade relations with China. – Reuters pic, September 3, 2021

SYDNEY – The Federated States of Micronesia (FSM) will tap a United States funding facility to construct a Pacific undersea communications cable, two sources told Reuters, after rejecting a Chinese company-led proposal deemed a security threat by American officials.

The US has taken great interest in several plans in recent years to lay optic fibre cables across the Pacific, projects that would bring vastly improved communications to island nations.

The undersea cables have far greater data capacity than satellites, leading Washington to raise concerns that the involvement of Chinese firms would compromise regional security. Beijing has consistently denied any intent to use cable infrastructure for spying.

Two sources with knowledge of the plans said FSM will use US funds to construct a line between two of its four states, Kosrae to Pohnpei, replicating part of a route proposed under a previous US$72.6 million (RM301 million) project backed by the World Bank and Asian Development Bank.

Reuters reported in June that the project, which also encompasses Nauru and Kiribati, was scuppered after Washington raised concerns that the contract would be awarded to Huawei Marine, now called HMN Technologies and majority-owned by the Shanghai-listed Hengtong Optic-Electric Co Ltd.

One source told Reuters that FSM will draw around US$14 million from the American Rescue Plan, a US facility created by President Joe Biden to distribute funds both at home and abroad to combat the health and economic impact of the Covid-19 pandemic.

FSM said it is committed to providing fibre connectivity to Kosrae, and onward connectivity to Kiribati and Nauru. It did not respond directly to questions about US funding.

The US State Department declined to comment.

The US and FSM have a long geopolitical relationship, enshrined in the Compact of Free Association, a decades-old agreement between the US and its former Pacific trust territories. Under that agreement, Washington is responsible for the island nation’s defence.

The second source said the US-funded cable will likely connect to the Hantru-1 undersea cable, a line primarily used by the US government that connects to the US Pacific territory of Guam.

Both sources spoke on condition of anonymity as they are not authorised to speak publicly.

The World Bank in a statement said it is working with FSM and Kiribati to map out their next steps after the original tender for the larger project concluded with no contract awarded.

Pacific politics

Undersea cables represent one of the newest and most sensitive fronts in the rivalry between China and the US in the strategic waters of the Pacific.

While FSM has close ties to the US, it also has long-standing diplomatic and trade relations with China.

Prominent US lawmakers have warned that Chinese companies could undermine competitive tenders by offering state-subsidised bids, as reported by Reuters previously.

The US Commerce Department publicly lists Huawei Marine on its so-called “Entity List” – known as a blacklist – that restricts the sale of US goods and technology to the company. The department told Reuters that Huawei Marine’s new owner, HMN Technologies, will also be captured under these restrictions.

China has strongly refuted the allegations. Its Foreign Ministry in a statement to Reuters said Chinese companies have a good record in cybersecurity.

“The so-called security threat (alleged) by the US is totally groundless, and has ulterior motives.

“Who the ‘hacker empire’ really is – engaging in spying and stealing secrets – is plain to the world.”

Australia, a strong regional ally of the US, has ramped up its presence in the Pacific through the creation of a A$2 billion (RM6.16 billion) infrastructure financing facility that island nations can potentially access for cable projects.

Nauru has been negotiating plans to tap into the Australian-backed Coral Sea Cable system, via Solomon Islands, sources told Reuters in June. – Reuters, September 3, 2021

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