High-speed internet to bring big change in remote Alaska

*In this Oct. 31, 2017 photo provided by Arctic Slope Telephone Association
Cooperative, crews with the Arctic Slope Telephone Association Cooperative
install fiber distribution cable n Utqiagvik, Alaska, for the new
high-speed fiber-optic system launching in Alaska’s northern region, where
several of the telecom company’s communities are located. The new link by
Anchorage-based wholesaler Quintillion is Alaska’s piece of a planned
international fiber-optic system that would eventually connect London and
Tokyo via the Arctic. (Arctic Slope Telephone Association Cooperative via A*
P) (Associated Press)
By Rachel D'Oro
AP
*December 21, 2017*
*https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/technology/high-speed-internet-to-bring-big-change-in-remote-alaska/2017/12/21/cf96f0d4-e627-11e7-927a-e72eac1e73b6_story.html
<https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/technology/high-speed-internet-to-bring-big-change-in-remote-alaska/2017/12/21/cf96f0d4-e627-11e7-927a-e72eac1e73b6_story.html>*

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Jeff Kowunna used his drone to record this year’s
celebration of another successful bowhead whaling harvest for one of the
oldest Alaska Native settlements.

The video from the three-day event in remote Point Hope, at the edge of the
Arctic Ocean, showed whaling captains sharing the flippers with residents,
traditional drumming and dancing, and the ever-popular blanket toss, where
villagers use seal skins to heave each other into the air.

But Kowunna’s plan to share this unique slice of Inupiat culture online was
thwarted by the area’s notoriously slow satellite connection.
This month, the 34-year-old whale hunter is ready to try again. His
community of 700 and several other isolated Alaska towns are getting a
commodity much of the U.S. has long taken for granted: high-speed internet.

“I’ve been counting the days,” Kowunna said of the broadband he hopes will
help him connect more immediately with the world with posts from gatherings
like the June whaling feast, or Qagruk, while updating folks who have moved
away. “I think it’s going to be a lot smoother sailing as far as streaming
to the web.”

The new service is part of a planned international fiber-optic system from
Anchorage-based wholesaler Quintillion that eventually will connect London
and Tokyo via the Arctic. It’s the result of several factors,
representative say, including technical advances, private investors willing
to bet on the system, and a warming Arctic environment that opened up a
limited construction season, allowing crews to bury hundreds of miles of
subsea cable off Alaska’s upper coast.

“Clearly, 20 years ago, even 10 years ago, the situation with the ice in
that part of the world would have made the progress much more difficult to
accomplish,” Quintillion spokesman Tim Woolston said.

The effect on far-northern Alaska — where many rely on a subsistence
lifestyle for food — could be dramatic: No more classroom computers
crashing during lessons, software taking an entire day to download, movies
buffering for hours, and sophisticated medical equipment sitting partially
unused.

“A project like this is critical,” said Mike Romano with NTCA-the Rural
Broadband Association, which represents 850 small telecom and broadband
service providers in the U.S. and Canada. Connecting rural communities
remains a significant broadband challenge because of the higher cost of
delivering service far from metropolitan hubs.

Alaska’s 1,400-mile (2,250-kilometer) portion of the international project
includes a land trunk line between Fairbanks and the Prudhoe Bay oil fields
that went live in the spring. Quintillion has not released plans or a
timetable for the larger project and will not say how much has been spent
so far in the private venture. New York private equity firm Cooper
Investment Partners is anchoring the financing.

Ship crews finished installing the last Alaska segment of subsea cable in
October, and the network became available to telecom providers Dec. 1.

The improved service won’t be cheap, said Jens Laipenieks, CEO of Artic
Slope Telephone Association Cooperative, which serves three of the affected
communities. Laipenieks expects the cost to drop when the final two phases
are built and more wholesale tenants join the system.

Still, commodities always cost more in the Arctic, where a gallon of milk
can carry a $10 price tag because everything has to be flown or shipped up.
Fiber-optic is no exception, but the expense has not dampened enthusiasm,
according to utility officials.

“That’s just the reality of being in an ultra-rural market,” Laipenieks
said. “But the technology will never be the limiting factor again.”

Not everyone is sold on the new link. In Utqiagvik, America’s northernmost
town, Inupiat whaling captain Gordon Brower balks at exposing his culture
to unnecessary criticism — from anti-whaling activists, for example.

“It’s unnecessary because we’re only just trying to provide food,” Brower
said. “We don’t have Walmart in the backyard over here.”

In Point Hope, Inupiat artist and traditional skin-boat maker Henry Koonook
worries people will be more distracted by the online world than they
already are. Koonook himself has nothing to do with computers, even to
connect with prospective buyers.

“That little box — what they call a laptop and iPhones — is ruining our
people,” he said. “It’s helping them with their education and stuff like
that, but they’re drifting away from the culture and traditions, and it’s
going fast.”

Others have big plans for tapping into the faster and more reliable service.

The Arctic Slope Regional Corp., an Alaska Native corporation and minority
investor in the Quintillion project, is developing an online store
featuring artwork by its shareholders, a tourism platform for its eight
villages and a repository of stories and videos featuring Inupiat elders.

“It’s just limitless what we can do now,” said Cheryl Stine, its chief
administrative officer.

The North Slope Borough, where Point Hope and Utqiagvik are located, is
developing a cultural website through its history, language and culture
office. The site will be called Puiguitkaat, Inupiaq for “things that
should never be forgotten,” according to Kathy Ahgeak, who heads the office.

“We have a wealth of traditional knowledge, ancient knowledge,” Ahgeak
said. “We want our children to know just how far back our heritage goes.”
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