It feels like sub-sea cable disruptions are becoming ever more common, with recent reports of major outages caused by severed cables in the Mediterranean, the Red Sea, the North Sea, and—most recently—off the coast of Africa.
This latest issue was reportedly the result of cable problems off the Ivory Coast and has resulted in widespread disruptions affecting a number of countries in the region. Mobile network operators and internet service providers were affected to varying degrees, resulting in poor connection quality for subscribers, and also impacting essential services such as banks, where some customers were unable to carry out transactions via bank apps and text. Efforts are underway to repair the damaged cables and restore full connectivity, but challenges persist. Repairing undersea cables can be a complex and time-consuming process, often requiring specialized equipment and expertise, and in the case of the West Africa cut may take five weeks to repair.
While these core pieces of infrastructure are hidden to most businesses, the economic consequences can be huge. NetBlocks estimates that Nigeria lost ₦273 billion ($593.6 million) in four days as a direct result of the disruption, underscoring the critical role that reliable internet connectivity plays in supporting economic growth and development.
This real-world situation highlights the importance of a robust internet infrastructure and the economic implications of internet outages. It also underscores the imperative to minimize the effects of such interruptions and guarantee uninterrupted connectivity for businesses and consumers worldwide, as well as the availability of critical SASE networking and security services.
Netskope NewEdge private cloud: The rationale
It was the anticipation of scenarios just like this that led to our significant investment in the Netskope NewEdge private cloud infrastructure. Because Netskope provides the gateway to the internet, cloud apps and private apps for our customers, maintaining access is critical. We take this responsibility seriously and are not satisfied to point to third-party issues as though they make connectivity disruption acceptable.
By investing in its own reliable, scalable, and high-performance infrastructure foundation (unlike vendors that rely on third-party infrastructure and public clouds), Netskope maintains complete control over the delivery of its services, is able to optimize for performance, and adapt quickly and proactively to evolving customer needs—including broader internet disruptions.
Network adaptability in action
So, what happened to the Netskope NewEdge during the cable cuts in Africa and how was Netskope able to react based on the capabilities of its NewEdge network? Using internal SaaS app monitoring data–including observations of traffic going to top destinations like Microsoft 365 –and leveraging integrated traffic management capabilities, Netskope NewEdge had already initiated corrective actions for customers before the Africa cable cut made headlines and in some instances even before customers felt any impact. NewEdge was able to do this by prioritizing alternate routes to workaround the issue, for example, where customer policies allowed us to, we were able to redirect traffic from South Africa to Europe, bypassing the impacted region entirely.
In addition to identifying alternate traffic paths to workaround the cable cut, the majority of Netskope users were transitioned to other in-region data centers, for instance South Africa users were moved from the Cape Town NewEdge data center to the unaffected alternative in Johannesburg. This autonomous rerouting of traffic and failout of the Cape Town data center in response ensured most customers maintained seamless access paired with optimized performance, mitigating the disruption and maintaining uninterrupted SASE service delivery.
NewEdge currently has more than 3,200 network adjacencies to over 650 unique ASNs, complementing its use of premium transit, to increase network performance, resilience and availability. In the case of the Africa cable cut, due to this extensive peering and network connectedness, users on-ramping NewEdge or getting to web, cloud, and SaaS destinations, had multiple options (or paths) for traffic to take with NewEdge, while also maintaining their security coverage.
- NewEdge’s Route Control enabled real-time traffic engineering to optimize for the best, lowest-latency path and route around the issues as they arose
- NewEdge Traffic Management (which is used to ensure users/sites are always connecting to the best NewEdge data center based on lowest latency) was key to having users/sites connected to the best performing data center—and getting re-connected to the next best in just seconds, and before any impact to the users’ digital experience.
- Netskope’s capacity management philosophy keeps actual utilization of NewEdge data centers at very low levels at all times to ensure capacity is always available on-demand in cases of emergency, for example if traffic needs be consolidated to a single data center due to a significant disruption in the global internet infra