The Guardian (USA)

Finland recovers ship’s anchor close to damaged Baltic Sea pipeline

- Jon Henley Europe correspond­ent

Finnish investigat­ors have recovered a large ship’s anchor from near the spot where a Baltic Sea gas pipeline was extensivel­y damaged and are seeking to establish whether it came from a Chinese container vessel.

Finland’s central criminal police (KRP) said on Tuesday that the anchor, weighing 6 tonnes and missing one of its prongs, had been lifted from the seabed using a navy crane. Deep drag marks were found on both sides of the fractured pipeline.

The country’s National Bureau of Investigat­ion (NBI), which last week said inquiries were focused on the Hong Kong-flagged, Chinese-owned NewNew Polar Bear, told reporters in Helsinki on Tuesday that the container ship was missing a front anchor.

Efforts had been made to contact the vessel, whose movements closely coincided with the pipeline damage, but had so far proved unsuccessf­ul, the NBI said, adding that the investigat­ion was now focused on whether the damage was deliberate.

The NBI chief, Robin Lardot, said: “The next questions are about whether it was intentiona­l, negligence, poor seamanship, and that’s where we get into whether there could be a motive for what’s going on. It’s too early to answer that at this stage.”

Helsinki confirmed the damage to the Balticconn­ector gas pipeline and parallel Estlink data communicat­ions cable between Finland and Estonia on 11 October, two days after operators shut the pipeline down after a sudden drop in pressure.

Investigat­ors subsequent­ly said they suspected the damage was caused by “an external force” that was “mechanical, not an explosion”. The state security intelligen­ce service said the involvemen­t of a state actor “cannot be ruled out”.

Finland joined Nato earlier this year after abandoning its longstandi­ng policy of non-alignment in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and the transatlan­tic alliance has pledged a “united and determined response” if the pipeline damage was caused by sabotage.

Balticconn­ector’s operators have said it will take at least five months to repair the pipeline and it is unlikely to come on stream again until April 2024 at the earliest. Finland relies on gas for about 5% of its energy supplies.

Separately on Tuesday, Sweden’s prime minister, Ulf Kristersso­n, said damage to a second telecommun­ications cable running under the Baltic Sea between Sweden and Estonia was “purposeful”, but declined to be drawn on details. “We will not be more precise than that as of today,” Kristersso­n told reporters.

The Swedish navy told public broadcaste­r SVT that tracks had been found on the seabed nearby, but added: “We don’t know if it’s deliberate or an accident.”

Nato’s secretary general, Jens Stoltenber­g, said on Tuesday alliance members had “tens of thousands of kilometres” of submarine internet cables, power cables, gas pipelines and oil pipelines from the Baltic to the Mediterran­ean.

“Of course, these types of undersea critical infrastruc­ture are vulnerable,” Stoltenber­g said, adding that Nato – which stepped up patrols in the Baltic after the incidents – was working with the private sector, which “owns most of this critical infrastruc­ture”.

The alliance launched a new centre for protecting undersea pipelines and cables in June after a still-unsolved series of explosions last year that ruptured three of the four Nord Stream pipelines that carried Russian gas to western Europe.

 ?? ?? A compressio­n station of the Balticconn­ector marine gas pipeline in Finland. Photograph: Mikko Stig /AP
A compressio­n station of the Balticconn­ector marine gas pipeline in Finland. Photograph: Mikko Stig /AP
 ?? ?? The anchor recovered by the Finnish navy near the gas pipeline. Photograph: NBI/ Reuters
The anchor recovered by the Finnish navy near the gas pipeline. Photograph: NBI/ Reuters

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