North·Analysis

From wolves to 'idiots' with backhoes, threats to fibre lines in the North are many

Since its construction in March 2017, the Mackenzie Valley Fibre Link has been struck by lightning, snagged and run over by a contractor, and chewed at by wildlife — 'most likely' wolves.

Gov’t documents show 3 incidents have damaged Mackenzie Valley Fibre Link since its completion in 2017

This temporary emergency fibre optic cable lies on the ground along Highway 3 in the N.W.T. following a recent fibre cut. Northwestel says all permanent fibre is installed using 'rigorous constructions standards,' primarily buried or installed on electrical pole lines. (Kate Kyle/CBC)

Yellowknifers are learning how fragile their internet connection can be after suffering two major telecommunications outages in the past three months.

Northwestel is usually secretive about threats to its infrastructure, but documents on the Mackenzie Valley Fibre Link, provided to the CBC through the Access to Information and Protection of Privacy Act, give a glimpse into just that.

The line is owned by the N.W.T. government but is maintained by a corporate group that includes Northwestel. It provides internet service to communities along the Mackenzie Valley in the Northwest Territories.

Since its construction in March 2017, the Mackenzie Valley Fibre Link has been struck by lightning and snagged and run over by a contractor. During repair work, a temporary cable was chewed at by wildlife — "most likely" wolves.

The Department of Finance declined an interview on damage to the line, but offered a statement saying the line is tested annually to ensure its integrity.   

Why Yellowknife is so vulnerable

Most people in Canada wouldn't know of a fibre-line break because there are so many different connections between cities. These connections, called redundancies, mean if one line is damaged or severed, another will pick up the slack instantaneously. 

There is a single cable running between Fort Providence and Yellowknife, so if anything happens to it, everybody on the far side of the damage will lose their connection.

Andrew Anderson, a spokesperson for Northwestel, said it is working with the Yukon and federal governments to finance and construct a loop that will connect the Mackenzie Valley Fibre Link to the one running along the Dempster Highway in Yukon, but that $79-million project will not affect the N.W.T.'s most populous city. 

Anderson says the line between Fort Providence and Yellowknife represents millions of dollars in investments. Adding a redundancy just to serve the city would mean several million more — and there's just no business case for it.

He added cuts to the line are actually quite rare. An entire year might go by where it sees no damage, while other years, like this one, might see multiple incidents.

A look at the communities the Mackenzie Valley Fibre Link serves. (Department of Finance)

An 'idiot with a backhoe'

This January, contractors near Wrigley, N.W.T., were doing road work when they ran over and snagged the Mackenzie Valley Fibre Link. 

"They went through the fibre right by a ... marker saying, 'Call NWTel before digging,'" states an outage report.

When you've got a 1,000-mile cable, you can't post a guard at every telephone pole.- Peter Turner, Yukon Chamber of Commerce

This type of damage has been on the rise over the past decade, according to Peter Turner, president of the Yukon Chamber of Commerce. 

Turner has a long history working with the telecommunications business. He spent four years managing Northwestel's internet service across the North, and before that he was with Sprint when it was developing the first fibre-optic network across the U.S.

"Some idiot with a backhoe will be digging a trench somewhere," he said. "They basically dig right through, and I think that's been the most common cause on the B.C. and Yukon side."

A photo of a map labelled 'Dempster Fibre Project.'
This map shows a project that will connect Yukon's fibre line to one that runs along the Mackenzie Valley in the N.W.T. The connection will create necessary redundancy to bolster telecommunications in many northern communities, but Yellowknife won't be affected by the project. (Dave Croft/CBC)

When it isn't an accident

Northwestel took the rare step of reporting this summer's second outage to the RCMP, after a suspected vandal cut the line early in the morning of July 15.

Anderson, with Northwestel, admits this isn't the first time somebody has been suspected of tampering with the line — people have shot at it in the past.

"That's disturbing," said Turner. 

"I know from past experience and working with other telecom communications carriers there is a lot of attention paid to security around telecom facilities. But the reality is, when you've got a 1,000-mile cable, you can't post a guard at every telephone pole." 

This is a picture of the Mackenzie Valley fibre optic cable. Since it was laid, it's been eaten at by wild animals, struck by lightning, and run over by construction workers. (David Thurton/CBC)

Acts of God

In 2017, lightning struck the Mackenzie Valley Fibre Link between Tulita and Wrigley, which spurred a splice and repair project that lasted months. 

Turner said the line is vulnerable to forest fires and other natural disasters because it's a delicate piece of infrastructure, no larger than the diameter of one's thumb. 

"It is made out of plastic and glass, and if you apply enough heat to something like that, you could probably melt it," he said.

The Department of Finance calls the lightning strike an "isolated incident" that did not impact customers.

Do animals eat fibre optic cable? 

Documents show that a temporary cable was at one point "most likely" chewed at by wolves.

Paul Frame, a provincial carnivore specialist with the government of Alberta, says it's "quite possible" wolves could have eaten at the line. 

He says they are extremely curious and sensitive to changes in their environment.

A file photo of a wolf. Paul Frame, a provincial carnivore specialist with the government of Alberta, says it's 'quite possible' wolves could have eaten at the fibre line.  (Dawn Villella/The Associated Press)

Frame studied wolves in the Northwest Territories for graduate work. He's observed gloves and other human items in wolf dens and even suspects they may have once stolen his camp chairs.

"To investigate things they smell it, look at it, and grab it with their mouth," he said.

"[Their mouths] are their only tool, so the possibility of chewing on any kind of novel object in their environment is pretty high." 

Peter Knamiller, the co-ordinator for Yukon's wolf management program, has seen evidence of them chewing on plastic buckets, jerry cans and playing with rope.

While wolves could be a likely culprit, Frame points out bears are also notorious for chewing infrastructure, especially plastic.

In a statement, a spokesperson for the Department of Finance said bears frequently knock over kilometre posts along the line but "this causes no damage to the line."

Allicia Kelly, the N.W.T.'s manager of wildlife research and monitoring for the South Slave, points out ground squirrels shouldn't be ruled out either. They gnaw and chew at things to grind down their teeth, which never stop growing.

With files from Kate Kyle