What Is Dark Fibre?

April 25 2016

Luis Cardenas

You surely have heard the term “dark fibre” and wondered what it is about. The term refers to optical fibre infrastructure that hasn’t been lit yet, meaning it has been installed but isn’t being used.

As we know, fibre optic cables are made of thin strands of glass or plastic through which data move as light pulses, caused by LED transmitters if the cable is multi-mode, or a much more sophisticated technology if it is single-mode. Dark fibre is called that because it isn’t active and there are no light pulses travelling through it.
Back in the 1990s, companies installed fibre optic infrastructure all over North America, especially in places with high-bandwidth demand, with the hope that demand would keep growing. But at the time it didn’t and the cost was many bankruptcies.

Nevertheless, the demand has grown since 2009 due to video streaming and smartphones — back in 2011, AT&T an 8,000% growth in mobile data demand — and the telecom industry started laying fibre optic networks again where they were needed as well as putting dark fibre use by leasing it to clients.

What it’s for

Nowadays, telecoms rent dark fibre to local broadband and content providers, healthcare institutions, government agencies and businesses that need to control their own network, so instead of leasing a service they lease an infrastructure that allows them to build their own network with their own equipment.

Leasing dark fibre offers a lot of benefits to the end user, for example avoiding spending time and capital in the construction, development and maintenance of their network. Also, in contrast with renting a bandwidth service, dark fibre provides low latency with very high throughput.

According to Arch Fiber Network, dark fibre gives clients the capacity to increase bandwidth as needed without paying any monthly additional cost and to upgrade the equipment at a time convenient them.

The report Dark Fibre Lease Considerations says dark fibre providers price it per strand per mile and in a set period. Usually, they give the client the Indefeasible Right of Use (IRU) for 20 years in a one-time payment, along with annual payments for operation and maintenance. Customers can also rent fibre for one, two or three years, making monthly payments with the option of leasing the infrastructure for another 20 years once the initial term is over.

Disadvantages

There are thousands of miles of dark fibre deployed across the country, and it still isn’t everywhere because it is only available where companies installed it or where they got permission to do it. Not all hospitals or businesses have access to dark fibre.

When dark fibre covers long distances it needs amplifiers, and those amplifiers need maintenance, which means spending more money. Furthermore, when long-haul dark fibre is exposed to accidental damage, it must be repaired by the company that leases the fibre, so reparations might take time.

Substituting

Wavelength services are an alternative where companies don’t want to lease an entire fibre optic infrastructure, because this allows them to buy a specific wavelength of an existing fibre from a service provider for their exclusive use.

This method is known as Wavelength Division Multiplexing (WDM), and it transmits several wavelengths over a fibre optic, which means data traffic is shared, but each wavelength has a specific laser with a specific colour. Thus, clients can get service from 1GBps up to 100GBps.

Renting dark fibre might be a solution to many businesses high-bandwidth demand, but being clear about its advantages and disadvantages is the best way assure a good decision is being taken.


Luis Cardenas is an economist and CFO of Beyondtech, Inc. This article first appeared as a blog. Source: Beyondtech, http://beyondtech.us/.

 

Related Articles


Latest Articles

  • Mastering Advanced Bidding Strategies in Electrical Contracting

    Mastering Advanced Bidding Strategies in Electrical Contracting

    December 1, 2025 By Melvin Newman, Patabid CEO & Ian Paterson, Patabid Client Success Manager and journeyman electrician with 30+ years of experience In the competitive world of electrical contracting, knowing how to estimate electrical jobs effectively can make the difference between winning profitable projects and watching opportunities slip away. For electrical contractors, mastering advanced… Read More…

  • Why Choosing the Right USB Charger Matters

    Why Choosing the Right USB Charger Matters

    December 1, 2025 Not all USB Chargers are Created Equal As the number of devices used daily increases, so does the need for a charger that delivers safe speeds and maximum charging potential. A high-quality USB charger delivers efficient charging without risk of damage, but the sea of USB chargers and outlets available on online… Read More…

  • How Homebuilding Incentives Can Pay Off for Cities, Homeowners and Local Economies: New Concordia Study

    December 1, 2025 A new study from Concordia University’s John Molson School of Business finds that improving housing affordability isn’t just a social good — it’s an economic growth opportunity. Build and Benefit: How Homebuilding Incentives Can Pay Off for Cities, Homeowners and Local Economies reframes housing policy reform as a sustainable fiscal growth strategy, demonstrating meaningful… Read More…

  • The Importance of HazLoc LED Lighting for Safe Workplaces

    The Importance of HazLoc LED Lighting for Safe Workplaces

    November 30, 2025 By CSC LED In Canada’s industrial lighting sector, one of the most critical yet often overlooked safety components is lighting designed specifically for hazardous locations, otherwise known as HazLoc (hazardous location) LED lighting. For workplaces dealing with flammable gases, vapours, combustible dust, or ignitable fibres, standard LED fixtures simply don’t cut it…. Read More…


Changing Scene

  • Skills Ontario Celebrates the Expansion of Trades & Tech Truck Program

    Skills Ontario Celebrates the Expansion of Trades & Tech Truck Program

    December 1, 2025 Skills Ontario is expanding its fleet of Trades & Tech mobile unit thanks to support from the Ontario Government. The government announced this morning it’s investment in Skills Ontario to expand experiential opportunities for Ontario’s future workforce.    “Ontario’s future relies on a strong, skilled workforce,” said David Piccini, Minister of Labour, Immigration,… Read More…

  • BC’s Canadian Mutual Recognition Agreement aims to Facilitate Interprovincial Trade

    BC’s Canadian Mutual Recognition Agreement aims to Facilitate Interprovincial Trade

    December 1, 2025 A new agreement signed by all provinces, territories, and the federal government will break down interprovincial trade barriers, making it easier for B.C. businesses to sell products across Canada, and for people to buy Canadian-made goods.   “When threats to Canada’s economic security land at our doorstep, we’re at our best when we work together as… Read More…

  • EB Horsman’s Commitment to Giving Back – A Year in Recap 2024/2025

    EB Horsman’s Commitment to Giving Back – A Year in Recap 2024/2025

    December 1, 2025 EB Horsman Cares is the company’s community engagement program that supports local children’s hospitals, communities, and non-profit initiatives with donations, fundraising, volunteering, and scholarships.  Since 1993, BC Children’s Hospital has been the primary recipient of EB Horsman & Son’s fundraising. However, as EB Horsman has continued to expand its businesses across Western… Read More…

  • Build Canada Homes Introduces Policy Framework to Guide its Investments in Affordable Housing

    Build Canada Homes Introduces Policy Framework to Guide its Investments in Affordable Housing

    December 1, 2025 Central to that work, the Government of Canada is stepping up with the recently launched Build Canada Homes, new federal agency with a mandate to scale up the supply of affordable housing across Canada. Build Canada Homes will also help fight homelessness by building transitional and supportive housing – working with provinces,… Read More…