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US FCC toughens submarine communication cable rules

By Thomson Reuters Jun 25, 2026 | 10:47 AM

By David Shepardson

WASHINGTON, June 25 (Reuters) – The Federal Communications Commission on Thursday voted to toughen oversight of submarine communications cables that handle 99% of international internet traffic, proposing rules that will make it harder for Chinese companies to provide ​equipment and fast-track approvals for trusted U.S. tech firms.

The FCC said it was ‌planning to require licenses for the first time for operators of submarine line terminal equipment, which performs the most critical function of a submarine cable system by connecting to U.S. terrestrial facilities.

U.S. companies such as Facebook parent Meta and Alphabet unit Google will benefit from the process to get quicker approval to ‌operate ​additional undersea cable systems to handle growing internet traffic.

“We presumptively ⁠exempt cable applications from extensive and ⁠time-consuming reviews, but only if such applicants can certify to stringent security standards and agree to ongoing oversight and monitoring,” FCC Chair Brendan Carr said. “The message is simple: adopt strong national security standards, and get a glide path to application approval.”

The fast-track ​requires companies that operate cables to guard against espionage and other security incidents and strictly monitor compliance with national security and data security. Operators would also have to agree ⁠not to use foreign equipment that could pose ⁠security risks.

With the undersea internet cable business booming, the FCC last year ​barred the use of equipment or services in undersea cable facilities from companies it has ​deemed and listed as posing threats to U.S. national security.

The firms that were ‌barred included Huawei, ZTE, China Telecom and China Mobile, but the new rules are expected to expand the ban to include the use of equipment from China or any other country it deems a foreign adversary in U.S. submarine cable systems.

For more than a year, U.S. ⁠officials have voiced concern about the network of more than 400 subsea cables that handle nearly all international internet traffic, arguing that there were threats from China and Russia.

In 2021, the ⁠Justice Department said that national ‌security agreements on submarine cables with Google and Meta were needed ⁠given China’s “sustained efforts to acquire the sensitive personal data of millions ​of ‌U.S. persons.”

Earlier this month, China said the U.S. should treat Chinese ​companies fairly.

“China ⁠is strongly dissatisfied and firmly opposes this,” the commerce ministry said in a June statement, reacting to the listing of Chinese companies. “China urges the U.S. to immediately stop its erroneous practices, immediately withdraw relevant measures and return to the correct track of building a constructive strategic and stable China-U.S. relationship.”

The Chinese embassy did not immediately return a request for comment.

(Reporting by David Shepardson; ​Editing by Aurora Ellis)