- Synapse will span ~9,700 km with 16 fibre pairs and support up to 800 Gbps circuits, targeting hyperscale, cloud and AI traffic growth.
- The project will include branching options to cities such as Fortaleza and direct links to major data hubs like Tecto’s Mega Lobster facility.
What happened: New subsea route to meet accelerating demand in west hemisphere
Brazilian digital infrastructure provider V.tal has announced a new international submarine cable system called Synapse that will connect Tuckerton, New Jersey, in the United States with São Paulo, Brazil. The announcement came on 21 January 2026 at the Pacific Telecommunications Council (PTC) event. Spanning roughly 9,700 kilometres and built with Space Division Multiplexing (SDM) and open cable architecture, the system is designed to support up to 800 Gbps transport services and feature 16 fibre pairs.
V.tal said Synapse responds to accelerating demand for capacity from hyperscalers, cloud providers and content platforms driven by artificial intelligence and data-intensive workloads. The cable will land at Praia Grande in Brazil and connect to São Paulo via terrestrial fibre, with planned expansions to Recife, Salvador, Rio de Janeiro and Colombia. A branching unit near Fortaleza will extend the system by ~460 km to link directly with Tecto’s 20 MW Mega Lobster data centre, reinforcing that city’s role as an international connectivity hub. Construction is slated to begin in the second half of 2026, with service expected between 2029 and 2030.
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Why it’s important
Synapse represents a significant expansion of trans-Americas data infrastructure at a time when robust cross-border digital links are commercially strategic. Brazil previously relied on systems such as the Seabras-1 cable linking New York and São Paulo, the first express route connecting the two economies in 2016. With AI and cloud services intensifying data flows between North and South America, new capacity and resilience are commercially and technically vital.
Financially, improved intercontinental connectivity supports higher-value cloud and content business, reduces latency for enterprise customers, and enhances competition among carriers and data centre operators. According to industry analysts, investments in subsea systems are increasingly tied to hyperscale operators’ growth strategies, with capacity often pre-sold to large tech firms to de-risk build-out costs.
For Latin America’s digital ecosystem, Synapse could reduce latency and network congestion, broaden access to US-based cloud platforms, and help position cities like Fortaleza as regional interconnection hubs. As noted by global telecom commentators, strengthening such digital arteries is critical for economic digitalisation and can attract further cloud and AI-driven enterprise investment.
