WHEN THE INTERNET GOES DOWN, CAN THE PHILIPPINES STAND FIRM?
By Junie Laylo
A lost internet connection once meant a frozen browser, delayed email, or an unanswered social media post. Today, it can slow banks, strain hospitals, delay cargo, weaken emergency alerts, disrupt government services, and cut families off from one another. The internet is no longer a convenience. It is part of the country’s basic infrastructure.
That is why digital resilience should be treated as a national priority. The Philippines must protect its submarine cables, diversify network routes, strengthen repair capacity, and make sure essential services can continue during disasters, cyberattacks, or geopolitical disruptions. The question is no longer only whether internet service is fast but whether the country can keep functioning when its digital systems are disrupted.
The Philippines has become more connected but also more exposed to modern risks. For most Filipinos, the internet means mobile data, Wi-Fi, banking apps, educational portals, family chats, and social media. Beneath that daily convenience, however, are the submarine fiber-optic cables that connect the country to the world. These systems carry financial transactions, business data, government communications, and personal messages, making them a national infrastructure even if they remain largely invisible to the public.
The country has made progress. More cable systems and landing points are being developed, repairs are faster than before, and satellite backup systems are improving. But serious weaknesses remain. Many major cable landing points are still concentrated along Luzon’s western coast, near the West Philippine Sea. A major earthquake, volcanic eruption, undersea landslide, or hostile act could damage several links at once. Even a partial disruption could affect government operations, businesses, finance, logistics, media, and households.
The risk is not theoretical. In 2006, a powerful earthquake near Taiwan damaged several undersea cables, disrupting internet and telecommunications services across parts of Asia for weeks. More recent disruptions around Taiwan’s outlying islands have shown how quickly communities can be isolated when cable links fail. The Philippines now has better emergency planning and access to repair capacity, but one repair ship is not enough for a nation of more than 7,000 islands. A country so reliant on digital connectivity cannot depend on a thin safety net or assume the next crisis will be easy to manage.
This is not an abstract concern. Most people may not think about submarine cables or cyber threats, but they understand the practical stakes: Will my banking app work? Will alerts reach my community? Can hospitals, ports, airports, and public offices continue operating? During a crisis, uncertainty spreads quickly. Rumors fill information gaps, panic grows, and public trust becomes harder to restore. Internet resilience is therefore also social resilience.
The situation in the West Philippine Sea adds a sharper security dimension. The issue is no longer limited to ships, reefs, fisheries, or coast guard confrontations; the seabed itself is now part of the strategic environment. Undersea cables, maritime sensors, power lines, and communications equipment have become assets that require monitoring and protection. Because many cable routes and landing points are tied to the same maritime space where tensions already exist, domestic digital preparedness is inseparable from national security. The Philippines does not need to exaggerate the threat, but it cannot afford to ignore it.
For an archipelago, the lesson is straightforward: the country cannot protect what it does not monitor, and it cannot defend against threats it has not clearly defined. The answer is not alarmism. It is preparation.
Congress should first pass legislation that clearly protects critical information infrastructure. Such a law should identify and prioritize digital lifelines, including cable landing stations, data centers, telecom networks, power systems, government cloud platforms, emergency communications, and financial networks.
The government also needs a structured framework for responding to cyber threats and attacks. When digital infrastructure is targeted, agencies should know who investigates, who attributes responsibility, who coordinates the response, and who is accountable.
The Philippines must also strengthen repair redundancy. A second domestic cable-repair capability, or a formal mutual-aid arrangement with trusted regional partners, would help close a dangerous gap. When cables fail, time is not merely money; it is continuity, confidence, and stability.
The country should likewise develop more cable landing points outside Luzon’s western coast, especially in eastern Luzon and Mindanao. Redundancy is not only about having more cables. It is about placing them in safer and more diverse locations.
Backup satellites should be integrated into the national resilience system, not treated as temporary emergency fixes. Satellites cannot replace undersea cables, but they can help keep critical services operating when cables and ground systems fail.
Resilience must also include affordable and reliable access for all. Millions of Filipinos still lack dependable connections, and during disasters, those without access are often the first to miss vital information. A network that mainly serves the already connected cannot be called truly resilient.
The private sector also plays a major role. Telecom companies, internet providers, banks, data centers, power companies, logistics firms, and platform providers should treat resilience as a core responsibility, not a public relations exercise. Free calls, charging stations, and emergency data can help, but they are no substitute for strong standards, tested backup plans, shared infrastructure, and clear accountability.
The Philippines has made substantial progress. Cybersecurity is receiving greater attention, market reforms may attract more players, satellite options are improving, and repairs are faster than before. Yet progress is not the same as preparedness. The real test will be whether the country can withstand overlapping crises: a typhoon, an earthquake, a cyberattack, a cable cut, or a maritime conflict.
Digital resilience must be built before the next crisis, not after it. When the internet goes down, the questions will not be merely technical. Can the government lead? Will people receive timely alerts? Will banks operate, hospitals function, families stay connected, and the country endure? That is the standard the Philippines must meet now.
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