Landing Point · SE Sweden
| Cable | Status |
|---|---|
| Aurora | Active |
Byxelkrok is a coastal locality in Sweden that serves as a submarine cable landing point in the Baltic Sea region. One submarine cable lands here, the Aurora system, connecting Sweden to neighboring Baltic and North Sea countries. As a landing point on Swedish territory, Byxelkrok participates in the intra-European connectivity corridor that links Scandinavia with Germany and Denmark.
The Aurora cable, with its connections to Denmark and Germany, enables regional submarine connectivity across the southern Baltic and into central Europe. This positions Byxelkrok as part of a broader northern European cable network, linking Swedish shores with the Danish and German coastlines through a relatively short undersea route.
Aurora is a submarine cable with a length of approximately 500 km, with a ready-for-service date of 2024 and currently in draft status. In addition to Byxelkrok, Sweden, the Aurora cable connects to landing points in Denmark and Germany. The cable's routing across the southern Baltic Sea and into the North Sea area establishes a direct link between Sweden, Denmark, and Germany, forming a triangular intra-European regional connection. No additional technical specifications such as capacity or fiber pairs are recorded for this cable.
Within Sweden, Byxelkrok is one of several submarine cable landing points distributed along the country's coastline. With a single cable landing, it sits at the lower end of the scale compared to Farosund, which hosts three cables, and to Klagshamn, Stavsnas, and Stockholm, each of which serve two cables. Byxelkrok shares its single-cable status with Borbby Strandbad and Capri Strand, indicating that Sweden's cable infrastructure is spread across multiple coastal locations, with some sites serving as more concentrated hubs than others.
Byxelkrok functions as a single-cable terminus in the Swedish submarine cable landscape, anchoring the Aurora system on its Swedish end. Through Aurora, the landing point enables direct undersea connectivity between Sweden, Denmark, and Germany, supporting intra-European regional data exchange across the Baltic Sea. The 500 km length of the Aurora cable reflects the relatively compact geography of this corridor, connecting three neighboring northern European countries within a confined marine environment.
As a one-cable landing point, Byxelkrok contributes a distinct node to the regional submarine cable graph, ensuring that Sweden's network of coastal landing infrastructure extends beyond its larger hubs. Its presence alongside other single-cable sites in Sweden illustrates how submarine cable access in the country is distributed across the coastline rather than concentrated at a single location.
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