High-Level Meeting: Safeguarding the Physical Backbone of Digital Futures
(Invitation Only)
Safeguarding the Physical Backbone of Digital Futures
A Path to navigate Geo-economic Risks and Security Threats in Transnational Critical Infrastructure Development
Event description:
As the Pact for the Future and the annexed Global Digital Compact reach the final stages of negotiation, States are set to reaffirm their commitment to establish “resilient digital infrastructure that provides safe and secure network coverage to all areas” – allowing all communities to fully benefit from digital public goods. These new roadmaps pay little attention, however, on how best to protect the physical “backbone” that underpins any development of the digital economy and the provision of vital services for populations.
Achieving the SDGs through digital transformation critically depends on the fair development and resilience of certain transnational critical infrastructures, including subsea cables and satellite constellations. Just as governments have come to realize its importance, the “Public Core of the Internet” has emerged as a focal point of growing international security concerns amid emerging conflicts and escalating tensions. The global competition and diversity of operators involved in their deployment also place such assets as pawns of major geo-economic maneuvers, risking increased fragmentation.
Against this backdrop, existing norms and frameworks can hardly ensure an efficient protection and redundancy of infrastructures whose disruption is likely to produce cascading damages on a systemic scale. Spanning multiple jurisdictions and areas beyond sovereignty, the Public Core of the Internet requires new governance mechanisms for greater stakeholder accountability and preparedness in face of new risks.
This high-level event, aligned with the Paris Call’s principle 2, will convene executives from key infrastructure operators, along with senior representatives from States, international organizations, and civil society, to assess emerging security threats and global trade challenges impacting the Public Core of the Internet. The session will consider remaining governance gaps and innovative cooperation schemes to protect global connectivity from such risks and mitigate harms to populations in the event of disruptions. Participants will also be invited to discuss how to connect such efforts with the United Nations digital agenda, alongside pitfalls to avoid in doing so. The outcomes of the event will feed the ongoing efforts of the Paris Call’s community to establish a risk-based approach towards a protection scheme to ensure integrity and availability of transnational critical infrastructures.
The event will be opened by H.E. Izumi Nakamitsu, United Nations Under-Secretary-General and High Representative for Disarmament Affairs.
Format:
The event will be structured around two interactives roundtable discussions facilitated by a moderator.
- First session on undersea cables (16:15 – 17:00): This session will explore the new geopolitical competition and emerging security concerns around undersea communication cable infrastructures, which still underpins over 95% of ‘s internet traffic. Participants will discuss the strategic importance of these infrastructures, vulnerabilities they face, as well as the implications of potential disruptions. The discussion will delve into the current geopolitical landscape, exploring new strategies of States and economic operators while assessing the risks of technological decoupling and cyberspace fragmentation.
- Second session telecom constellations (17:15 – 18:00). The fast-paced development of the low Earth orbit satellite constellations market is transforming the face of global connectivity, improving digital inclusion in under-connected regions while finding numerous applications in both civil and military fields. This session will explore emerging physical and cyber threats posed to these infrastructures, as well as solutions to remediate any vulnerability – drawing new perspectives on public-private collaboration in this regard. Participants will discuss the new roles and responsibilities of satellites operators since the war in Ukraine, serving as both as collateral target and active players of geopolitical shifts.
The event will conclude with a cocktail reception (from 18:00)
If you are interested in attending this event, please contact Pablo Rice at [email protected] to request an invitation or get more information.