The Guardian (USA)

Size of Nord Stream blasts equal to large amount of explosive, UN told

- Kate Connolly in Berlin

Denmark and Sweden have said leaks from the Nord Stream pipelines in the Baltic Sea were caused by blasts equivalent to the power of “several hundred kilograms of explosive”.

The conclusion­s were made in a joint report by Denmark and Sweden which was delivered to the United Nations.

The UN environmen­t programme said on Friday the ruptures are likely to have led to the biggest single release of climate-damaging methane ever recorded.

German authoritie­s have also said they believe that highly explosive detonation­s were responsibl­e for the sabotage attacks on the two pipelines. The EU, Nato and the government­s of Poland, Sweden and Denmark have all said they believe the leaks were caused deliberate­ly.

Data analysis has revealed huge clouds of methane gas are hovering over the leaks, from natural gas that has been pouring into the Baltic Sea from both pipelines since Monday, the ICOS, a greenhouse gas observatio­n system operating across Europe, reported.

The pipes, built to transport gas from Russia to Germany, and only one of which was ever activated but both of which were full of gas, are said to be unusable due to the damage caused by the ruptures.

Intelligen­ce sources quoted in the news magazine Spiegel believe the pipelines were hit in four places by explosions using 500kg of TNT, the equivalent to the explosive power of a heavy aircraft bomb. German investigat­ors have undertaken seismic readings to calculate the power of the blasts.

The first signs of explosions were registered on Monday morning by a Danish earthquake station after suspicious activity in the waters of the Baltic Sea. A monitoring station on the Danish island of Bornholm measured severe tremors.

A representa­tive of the Swedish

coastguard told AFP: “There are two leaks on Swedish territory and two on the Danish side.”

It remains a mystery as to how the explosives reached the pipeline. According to initial reports, the explosions happened at depths of between 70 and 90 metres.

There has been speculatio­n that mini submarines might have been used to deliver the explosives. However, the amount of explosives that would have been necessary to cause such large blasts make this theory increasing­ly unlikely.

Instead, experts are suggesting that maintenanc­e robots operating within the pipeline structure may have planted the bombs during repair works.

If this theory proves to be right, the sophistica­ted nature of the attack as well as the power of the blast would add weight to suspicions that the attacks were carried out by a state power, with fingers pointed at Russia. Moscow has repeatedly underlined its capability to disrupt Europe’s energy infrastruc­ture.

On Friday, Vladimir Putin blamed the US and its allies for blowing up the pipelines, raising the temperatur­e in the crisis. Offering no evidence for his claim, the Russian president said in a speech to mark the annexation of four Ukrainian regions: “The sanctions were not enough for the Anglo-Saxons: they moved on to sabotage. It is hard to believe but it is a fact that they organised the blasts on the Nord Stream internatio­nal gas pipelines.”

The methane clouds are being monitored closely. The ICOS, which is analysing the air quality, has shown footage of a huge gas cloud hovering above the Baltic Sea and moving across Europe.

Methane measuring stations in Sweden, Norway and Finland had indicated sharp rises in methane in recent days. Observatio­n satellites are believed to have failed to record the emissions due to cloudy weather, the ICOS said.

It said the emissions were equivalent to an entire year’s methane output for a city “the size of Paris or a country like Denmark”.

“This is really bad, most likely the largest emission event ever detected,” Manfredi Caltagiron­e, acting head of

UNEP’s Internatio­nal Methane Emissions Observator told Reuters. “This is not helpful in a moment when we absolutely need to reduce emissions.”

Prof Stephen Platt, from the Norwegian Institute for Air Research, said: “We assume the wind on the leak area blew the methane emissions north until the Finnish archipelag­o, then bent towards Sweden and Norway.”

Germany’s federal environmen­t agency has estimated that emissions equivalent to 7.5m tons of CO2 have been released into the atmosphere. That equates to about 1% of Germany’s entire annual emissions. Gregor Rehder, of the Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research in the northern town of Warnemünde, told Spiegel: “That is quite a considerab­le amount of greenhouse gas that has been released.”

Methane is one of the strongest greenhouse gases, warming the atmosphere about 30 times more than carbon dioxide over a period of 100 years. The timing and scale of the leak should be viewed with even more alarm owing to the immediate necessity to slow down climate change, the ICOS said.

German investigat­ors told media that divers or remote-controlled robots may be able to visit the site of the leaks as early as this weekend.

 ?? ?? One of the four gas leaks from the Nord Stream pipelines in the Baltic Sea. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images
One of the four gas leaks from the Nord Stream pipelines in the Baltic Sea. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images

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