The Audio Long Read

Extremely offline: what happened when a Pacific island was cut off from the internet

Nov 7, 2025
A powerful volcanic eruption devastated Tonga's internet connection, revealing our reliance on fragile underwater cables. Residents faced historical isolation as communication cut off. Ingenious workarounds emerged: banks used thumb drives, while a sailor sent crucial messages via sat-text. The rebuilding efforts took weeks, highlighting the need for more resilient infrastructure. Discussions on the geopolitical implications of cable security emphasize the fragility of global connectivity in modern life.
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ANECDOTE

Immediate Shock And Local Fear

  • Sam Veer experienced the eruption firsthand as windows trembled and ash rained while he rushed to collect his children.
  • He only discovered the full internet outage the next morning when tuning into Radio Tonga because his phone and power had died.
INSIGHT

The Internet Is Tangible And Fragile

  • Subsea cables are thin, garden-hose–like structures carrying 95% of international internet traffic across vast distances.
  • Their fragile physicality makes the global internet materially dependent on few vulnerable links rather than ethereal infrastructure.
INSIGHT

Volcanic Damage Can Sever Whole Networks

  • The Hunga Tonga eruption likely caused fast-moving pyroclastic flows that severed and buried long stretches of cable offshore.
  • When the cable failed, Tonga lost not just internet but landline telephony too, revealing how dependent communications are on fibre routes.
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