Europe

Finland-Estonia power cable severed

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A submarine power cable connecting Finland and Estonia was damaged on Wednesday, Finnish Prime Minister Petteri Orpo announced. This marks the latest in a series of incidents involving submarine cables and energy pipelines in the Baltic Sea.

Arto Pahkin, operations manager for Finland’s electricity grid, informed public broadcaster Yle that the possibility of sabotage could not be excluded. However, Orpo assured that Finland’s electricity supply was unaffected by the blackout. “The authorities remain vigilant even at Christmas and are investigating the situation,” he wrote.

The energy operator Fingrid reported that the flow of electricity through the EstLink 2 cable, which transmits power to Estonia, was disrupted at 12:26 local time (13:26 TSI). This event follows a similar pattern of recent disruptions in the Baltic Sea.

Last month, two telecommunications cables linking Sweden and Denmark in the Baltic Sea were severed. Suspicion quickly fell on the Chinese ship Yi Peng 3, which monitoring websites indicated was near the cables at the time of the damage. Despite these suspicions, Sweden announced last Monday that Chinese authorities declined a request by Swedish prosecutors to investigate the vessel, which has since left the area.

Earlier incidents include the damage to the Arelion cable, running from the Swedish island of Gotland to Lithuania, on November 17, and the severing of the C-Lion 1 cable, which connects Helsinki to the German port of Rostock, on November 18 south of the Swedish island of Öland.

European authorities have suggested that these incidents may be acts of sabotage connected to the ongoing war in Ukraine. However, the Kremlin has dismissed these allegations, labeling them as “absurd” and “ridiculous.”

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