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Saunavaara J. Specific entry: Social and Economic Development Load article (pdf, 0.9MB ) AnnotationSome years ago, the Arctic Ocean was still described as one of the last oceans that did not have subsea communications cables across it. This situation is now changing. One of the greatest increases in global data transfer is predicted to be traffic between Asia and Europe, and the Arctic Ocean offers a shortcut, making physical cable connections shorter and decreasing latency. Recent developments regarding two ongoing subsea communications cable projects (Quintillion and Arctic Connect), which aim to connect East Asia and Europe, are discussed, and the connection between these projects and regional development policies in Hokkaido and northern Finland are analysed. It is shown that the proposition that improved international connectivity through subsea communications cables could bring information-intensive industries into the region had been stronger in Finland. This is largely due to a lack of information and awareness concerning these projects among the regional actors in Hokkaido; however, no concrete policy or funding instrument has been developed in either of the case regions.About authorsJuha SAUNAVAARA: PhD, Docent; Assistant Professor. Hokkaido University Arctic Research Centre and the Global Station for Arctic Research;. Global Institution for Collaborative Research and Education in Hokkaido University, Japan. KeywordsArctic, subsea data cable, connectivity, regional development, Hokkaido, northern FinlandDOI10.17238/issn2221-2698.2018.32.63UDC332.1(98+524+98)(045)This work is licensed under a CC BY-SA License. |