CIRD70340 - Telecommunications licences and rights: IRUs: background
The beginnings of international submarine cable telegraphy came
in 1850 when the first cable crossing of the English Channel was
laid. The first transatlantic telephone cable was laid in 1956.
This was a co-axial cable carrying 36 analogue telephone channels.
In the 1980s there were two major technological advances: digital
transmission and optic fibre. The first European undersea optic
fibre cable was installed in 1986 between Belgium and the UK. In
1988 the first Trans- Atlantic optic fibre cable came into
operation. In the 1990s the first optically amplified systems were
built. At each stage capacity was greatly expanded.
A consortium of owners has traditionally sponsored submarine
cables. Capacity in consortium cables is divided into Minimum
Investment Units and operators sell capacity through IRUs. IRUs are
sold through capacity purchase agreements that often commit a buyer
to a unit of capacity for the remaining design life of the cable.
In recent years the use of IRUs to trade capacity in all forms of
cable, both submarine and subterranean, has become more commonplace
and modern capacity purchase agreements take a wide variety of
forms.
IRUs - definition
An IRU is a legal interest created by contractual agreement that
confers an indefeasible and exclusive right of access to some or
all of the capacity in a telecommunications cable system on another
party. 'Indefeasible' is a term meaning not liable to be annulled
or forfeited. (However, see
CIRD70355 about the granting of IRUs).
The rules in FA00/SCH23 apply to IRUs. They are not
restricted to submarine cables, but apply to indefeasible rights to
use all telecommunications cable systems. However, the rules do not
apply to indefeasible rights in non-cable systems (such as
satellite systems).
