I haven’t found a good source of news on submarine cable cuts/fixes, but anecdotally it’s not that often - maybe once a year on cables through suez. Atlantic you never notice.
Even rarer is something like the recent Shetland outage where virg cables were lost.
"Don't these cables ever break?
Yes! Cable faults are common. On average, there are over 100 each year.
You rarely hear about these cable faults because most companies that use cables follow a “safety in numbers” approach to usage, spreading their networks' capacity over multiple cables so that if one breaks, their network will run smoothly over other cables while service is restored on the damaged one.
Accidents like fishing vessels and ships dragging anchors account for two-thirds of all cable faults. Environmental factors like earthquakes also contribute to damage. Less commonly, underwater components can fail. Deliberate sabotage and shark bites are exceedingly rare. "
In this case it was about once a year and it was the only cable directly connecting the two locations. There was one occasion where there was a break only months after one was finally repaired, really frustrating. There are more cables taking that route now, so a bit of redundancy.
Most of the time I'd find out officially via network operators bulletin boards (i.e. those looking after AS and IXs) there wouldn't be anything reported in the local news because, for most people, as this article alludes to, the content edge servers they actually connect to are pretty close, both physically (distance) and virtually (hops).
Even rarer is something like the recent Shetland outage where virg cables were lost.