The Bulgarian owner at the centre of a new cable cutting incident in the Baltic has denied its ship deliberately carried out the latest damage to subsea infrastructure in the region, something analysts are disputing while politicians discuss clamping down further on ships leaving Russia.
Sam Chambers January
28, 2025
https://splash247.com/baltic-states-call-for-new-rules-to-tackle-shadow-fleet-threat/
The Swedish Prosecution Authority seized the 32,200 dwt,
Navibulgar-owned bulker Vezhen yesterday, suspecting it of damaging un
underwater fiber optic cable linking Latvia and the Swedish island of Gotland
on Sunday, the latest in a series of undersea sabotage attacks plaguing the
Baltic region.
On its homepage, Navibulgar has responded claiming it has
not information about intentional actions by the crew of the Vezhen, suggesting
instead that the ship ran into bad weather.
Dimitris Ampatzidis, a risk and compliance analyst at
maritime data giant Kpler, suggested the weather on Sunday in the region was
calm to moderate, and the Vezhen’s movements that day bore striking
similarities to other ships accused of similar sabotage such as the Yi Peng 3
and the NewNew Polar Bear.
“A vessel slows down, deviates from its expected course,
exhibits erratic movement, and soon after, a vital undersea cable is found
damaged. The sequence of events follows a now well-documented pattern,”
Ampatzidis wrote in an article carried by MarineTraffic.
“What makes this incident particularly striking is how
predictable it is when compared to previous events. The combination of vessel
behavior and infrastructure damage forms a worrying pattern that continues to
unfold in plain sight,” Ampatzidis argued.
Lithuania’s foreign minister, Kestutis Budris, called
yesterday for a review of current shipping regulations following a spate of
subsea infrastructure damage.
Seabed gas pipelines, power cables and fiber optic cables
have all been attacked – likely by merchant ships dragging their anchors – in
recent months across the Baltic, forcing NATO to establish Baltic Sentry, a
naval protection operation.
“Navigation rules in the Baltic Sea need to be reviewed,
especially when it comes to the use of anchors,” Budris wrote in a social media
post.
In relation to the vessels used by Russia to evade
sanctions, he wrote that “the shadow fleet is a major problem that puts our
environment and critical infrastructure at risk.”
A joint statement from the heads of state or government of
Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland and Sweden
earlier this month noted: “Combatting breakage of undersea cables and pipelines
represents a global problem.”
The statement went on to discuss the threats posed by the
growth of the shadow fleet.
“Russia’s use of the so-called shadow fleet poses a
particular threat to the maritime and environmental security in the Baltic Sea
region and globally. This reprehensible practice also threatens the integrity
of undersea infrastructure, increases risks connected to sea-dumped chemical
munitions, and significantly supports funding of Russia’s illegal war of
aggression against Ukraine,” the statement read.
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