OOS2025-526, updated on 15 Sep 2025
https://doi.org/10.5194/oos2025-526
One Ocean Science Congress 2025
© Author(s) 2025. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Submarine cables feel the heat from global warming
Marc-Andre Gutscher1, Giuseppe Cappelli1,2, Lionel Quetel2, Melody Philippon3, Jean-Frederic LeBrun3, Christophe Nativelle4, Jean-Gabriel Quillin5, and Emmanuel Autret6
Marc-Andre Gutscher et al.
  • 1Geo-Ocean, UMR6538, CNRS, Univ. Brest, Ifremer, Plouzane, France
  • 2IDIL Fibre Optics, Lannion, France
  • 3Geosciences Montpellier, Université des Antilles, CNRS, Université de Montpellier, Pointe à Pitre, Guadeloupe
  • 4Orange Caraïbes, Guadeloupe
  • 5Conseil Régional de la Guadeloupe, Basse Terre, Guadeloupe
  • 6Laboratoir d'Océanographie Physique et Spatiale, Ifremer, Plouzane, France

Long-term environmental monitoring of the deep ocean environment is crucial for better understanding the feedback processes between the oceans and Earth’s climate in the face of global warming. However, obtaining in-situ observations from the deep seafloor is difficult and costly. Use of laser reflectometry in optical fibers using existing submarine telecommunication cables can help bridge this knowledge gap. We performed distributed thermal sensing (using the Brillouin Optical Time Domain Reflectometry technique) on a network of commercially operating telecom cables connecting the islands of the Guadeloupe archipelago in water depths of 10 - 700 m. Monitoring at regular 6 month intervals over the past 2.5 years reveals a temperature change (delta T) of +1.3°C  between June 2022 and late-May 2024 on the shallow carbonate platform (10 - 40 m water depth) south of Grande-Terre (Saint François), Guadeloupe. These sea-floor measurements are corroborated by satellite observations of the Sea-Surface-Temperature (SST) during the past three years, which document a similar (+1.3°C) temperature increase at the sea surface, in the same location (offshore Saint François). A smaller temperature increase (0.2 - 1.0°C) is observed in deeper waters (300 - 700 m) between the islands over the same period (June 2022 - late-May 2024). These results can open the path for widespread use of submarine cables for long-term environmental monitoring of the seafloor.

How to cite: Gutscher, M.-A., Cappelli, G., Quetel, L., Philippon, M., LeBrun, J.-F., Nativelle, C., Quillin, J.-G., and Autret, E.: Submarine cables feel the heat from global warming, One Ocean Science Congress 2025, Nice, France, 3–6 Jun 2025, OOS2025-526, https://doi.org/10.5194/oos2025-526, 2025.