Feds will invest $46.5M to boost high-speed internet in coastal Alaska

The 814-mile undersea link will connect an existing broadband hub on Kodiak Island with communities along the Alaska Peninsula to Unalaska. (Source: Zoom via Eric Stone / KRBD)

The federal government announced it’s investing $46.5 million to bring high-speed internet to communities across coastal Alaska. That’s expected to improve internet speeds in Southeast Alaska and out as far as the Aleutians.

U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Sonny Perdue made the announcement Tuesday. He said he understands Alaskans are isolated by geography.

“But when we get this high speed, broadband gigabit-speed there, you’re going to be as connected as anyone on the mainland here in that regard,” Perdue said.

More than half of the federal money — $25 million — is going to a subsidiary of GCI to build about 800 miles of undersea fiber cable stretching from Kodiak Island, along the Alaska Peninsula and the Aleutian Chain.

GCI is also spending $33 million of its own capital to complete the connection in 2022.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s rural utilities administrator Chad Rupe said the Trump administration recognizes the strategic importance of Dutch Harbor, one of the nation’s largest fishing ports.

“This port is one of our nation’s western, most northernmost natural deepwater ports,” Rupe said. “So this connectivity along the Aleutian chain is especially important not just for our rural economies, but just by sheer geography to support our national defense.”

GCI Chief Operating Officer Greg Chapados said once the fiber optic line is completed, speeds for those living in remote communities should be comparable to Alaska’s urban areas.

“The digital divide between Unalaska and Anchorage will be eliminated,” Chapados said.

GCI said the affected communities in the first phase will be Unalaska, King Cove, Sand Point, Akutan, Chignik Bay and Larsen Bay.

Separately, Alaska Power & Telephone has been awarded $21.5 million to build an undersea fiber optic cable in Southeast Alaska. It would run from Juneau’s Lena Point down the Wrangell Narrows and link communities on Prince of Wales Island.

AP&T is committing just over $7 million to the project. CEO Mike Garrett said it will take about five years to build the 214-mile undersea cable the company is calling SEALink.

“It’s easy to compare this to a superhighway,” Garrett said.

The submerged cable will run from Lena Point near Juneau to Prince of Wales Island. (Graphic by Alaska Power & Telephone)

 After 2025 service will be extended from Kasaan and Coffman Cove to other communities on Prince of Wales, the company said.

The $46.5 million in Alaska grants are part of $600 million approved by Congress in 2018 for the federal ReConnect Program to improve internet connectivity across rural America.

Alaska’s Congressional delegation was also on the Tuesday call.

Nobody from the federal government or telecom companies fielded any questions from reporters invited to cover the announcement.

Jacob Resneck, CoastAlaska

Jacob Resneck is CoastAlaska's regional news director based in Juneau. CoastAlaska is our partner in Southeast Alaska. KTOO collaborates with partners across the state to cover important news and to share stories with our audiences.

Sign up for The Signal

Top Alaska stories delivered to your inbox every week

Site notifications
Update notification options
Subscribe to notifications