Suspected Sabotage Shuts Down Balticconnector Pipeline Between Finland And Estonia

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from Great Game India:

According to Finnish President Sauli Niinistö, there is suspected sabotage as the Baltic Connector Pipeline between Finland and Estonia shuts down.

A year after explosions shut down the crucial Nord Stream 1 pipeline, a pipeline carrying natural gas between Finland and Estonia is the subject of an international investigation into a possible act of sabotage, prompting new worries about the security of Europe’s energy infrastructure.

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The 95-mile-long Balticconnector pipeline, which runs beneath the Baltic Sea, has been temporarily shut down due to a suspected leak, according to Gasgrid, Finland’s gas transmission company. According to Gasgrid, reopening the pipeline will take at least five months.

The gas leak and damage to an undersea communications cable, according to Finnish President Sauli Niinistö, were probably “caused by external activity.” This week, wholesale gas prices in Europe increased by more than 20% as a result of worries that it might have been the result of an attack.

Jens Stoltenberg, Secretary General of NATO, stated on Wednesday that it was crucial to determine the type of damage and how it occurred.

“If it is proven to be a deliberate attack on NATO critical infrastructure, then this will be of course serious, but it will also be met by a united and determined response from NATO,” Stoltenberg told reporters at a summit in Brussels.

The Balticconnector is a piece of a larger system that transports gas from Lithuania to Finland via Latvia, Estonia, and Latvia. A new liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal on the Finnish side of the pipeline is the source of the gas that Finland has been utilizing to transport gas back to Estonia as needed since April.

An offshore vessel of the Finnish Border Guard on patrol at sea on October 10, 2023, near the place where the Balticconnector was damaged

Balticconnector is a connecting pipeline, not a major importer of gas into Europe. Its annual capacity of 2.6 billion cubic meters, or 0.63%, of the 415 billion cubic meters of gas supplied to the European Union and the United Kingdom in total last year, is hardly a drop in the bucket.

According to specialists speaking to CNN, neither Finland nor Estonia rely heavily on natural gas to meet their energy needs. Furthermore, Estonia is still linked to the European gas grid through Lithuania, and Finland may still obtain gas from its LNG terminal.

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