CNTR Monitor 2025: New Realities of AI in Global Security

The latest CNTR Monitor focuses on the current boom in artificial intelligence and its impacts on global security. Open access

Cluster for Natural and Technical Science Arms Control Research

We research emerging technologies and developments in the natural sciences from an interdisciplinary perspective. Military innovations, digital warfare and disinformation influence the balance of power and create uncertainty. In order to provide impetus for arms control at the international level, it is important not only to identify emerging problems at an early stage, but also to have the technical competence to address these problems. That is why we develop scientifically sound bases for recommendations for action to strengthen arms control.

In the CNTR research and transfer cluster, researchers from the natural and social sciences work together closely. We are based at the Peace Research Institute Frankfurt (PRIF), the Technical University of Darmstadt and Justus Liebig University Giessen.

CNTR is organized into three research groups:

These three groups work together on the cross-cutting topics of artificial intelligence and verification. The natural and technical science research is complemented by the research area “Arms Control Law”.

Subsea cables to Antarctica: Technological challenges and geopolitical implications of connecting the material internet’s last frontier

Cover of the Journal "Telematics & Informatics Report". Journal name on black background with a web of light signals spanning over a cityscape.
Article by Jonas Franken, Patrick Flamm & Christian Reuter

Antarctica remains the last continent unconnected to the global fiber-optic network, relying instead on costly and limited satellite communications. This work examines the implications of subsea cable projects aiming to connect Antarctica. While such projects promise to transform scientific research through high-bandwidth, low-latency connectivity, they also raise profound geopolitical, legal, and security questions. Drawing on scholarship on infrastructural politics and polar governance, we analyze planned projects through the lenses of authority, sovereignty, and security. The analysis revealed that, although existing frameworks under the Antarctic Treaty System allow for unilateral infrastructure development with limited oversight, the installation of data cables introduces new challenges. These include questions of ownership and regulatory control, the dual-use nature of cables equipped with new sensor capabilities, and the geopolitical implications of cable routes connected to military or intelligence-sharing allies. The paper argues that these projects could shift the balance of Antarctic cooperation, depending on how transparently they are managed and how inclusively bandwidth and sensor data access are offered. While fiber-optic connectivity promises major gains for climate monitoring and scientific collaboration, it also risks deepening strategic mistrust and may undermine the continent’s legal and political functional balance if left uncoordinated.

Bibliographic Record:

Franken, Jonas; Flamm, Patrick & Reuter, Christian. “Subsea cables to Antarctica: Technological challenges and geopolitical implications of connecting the material internet’s last frontier" Telematics & Informatics Report, 22, June 2026.

Open Access publication

Latest Publications

Subsea cables to Antarctica: Technological challenges and geopolitical implications of connecting the material internet’s last frontier

Cover of the Journal "Telematics & Informatics Report". Journal name on black background with a web of light signals spanning over a cityscape.
Article by Jonas Franken, Patrick Flamm & Christian Reuter

Antarctica remains the last continent unconnected to the global fiber-optic network, relying instead on costly and limited satellite communications. This work examines the implications of subsea cable projects aiming to connect Antarctica. While such projects promise to transform scientific research through high-bandwidth, low-latency connectivity, they also raise profound geopolitical, legal, and security questions. Drawing on scholarship on infrastructural politics and polar governance, we analyze planned projects through the lenses of authority, sovereignty, and security. The analysis revealed that, although existing frameworks under the Antarctic Treaty System allow for unilateral infrastructure development with limited oversight, the installation of data cables introduces new challenges. These include questions of ownership and regulatory control, the dual-use nature of cables equipped with new sensor capabilities, and the geopolitical implications of cable routes connected to military or intelligence-sharing allies. The paper argues that these projects could shift the balance of Antarctic cooperation, depending on how transparently they are managed and how inclusively bandwidth and sensor data access are offered. While fiber-optic connectivity promises major gains for climate monitoring and scientific collaboration, it also risks deepening strategic mistrust and may undermine the continent’s legal and political functional balance if left uncoordinated.

Bibliographic Record:

Franken, Jonas; Flamm, Patrick & Reuter, Christian. “Subsea cables to Antarctica: Technological challenges and geopolitical implications of connecting the material internet’s last frontier" Telematics & Informatics Report, 22, June 2026.

Open Access publication

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