News Sabotage fears: Countries investigate leaks in Russian undersea gas lines
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Sabotage fears: Countries investigate leaks in Russian undersea gas lines

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European countries are investigating leaks in two Russian gas pipelines that raised concerns across the continent about sabotage on infrastructure at the heart of an energy crisis.

Meanwhile, Ukraine insisted it will press ahead with its plan to wrest back all its occupied land from Russia.

It remained far from clear who might be behind any foul play, if proven, on the Nord Stream pipelines that Russia and European partners spent billions of dollars building.

Experts and also Russia, which built the network, said the possibility of sabotage could not be ruled out.

Sweden’s Maritime Authority issued a warning about two leaks in the Nord Stream 1 pipeline, shortly after a leak on the nearby Nord Stream 2 pipeline was discovered that had prompted Denmark to restrict shipping in a five nautical mile radius.

Denmark’s Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen said that leaks detected in the Nord Stream gas pipelines clearly were caused by deliberate actions and could not have been a result of accidents.

“It is now the clear assessment by authorities that these are deliberate actions. It was not an accident,” Ms Frederiksen told journalists.

“There is no information yet to indicate who may be behind this action.”

Both pipelines have been flashpoints in an escalating energy war between European capitals and Moscow that has pummelled major Western economies, sent gas prices soaring and sparked a hunt for alternative energy supplies.

“There are some indications that it is deliberate damage,” said a European security source, while adding it was still too early to draw conclusions. “You have to ask: Who would profit?”

Russia also said the leak in the Russian network was cause for concern and sabotage was one possible cause.

“No option can be ruled out right now,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.

Neither pipeline was pumping gas to Europe at the time the leaks were found amid the dispute over the war in Ukraine. But the incidents will scupper any remaining expectations that Europe could receive gas via Nord Stream 1 before winter.

“The destruction that occurred on the same day simultaneously on three strings of the offshore gas pipelines of the Nord Stream system is unprecedented,” network operator Nord Stream AG said.

“It is not yet possible to estimate the timing of the restoration of the gas transport infrastructure.”

Although neither were in operation, both pipelines still contained gas under pressure.

Denmark’s energy minister Dan Jorgensen said in a written comment leaking gas had been detected in Nord Stream 2 on Monday between Russia and Denmark.

Gazprom, the Kremlin-controlled company with a monopoly on Russian gas exports by pipeline, declined comment.

Russia slashed gas supplies to Europe via Nord Stream 1 before suspending flows altogether in August, blaming Western sanctions for causing technical difficulties. European politicians say that was a pretext to stop supplying gas.

The new Nord Stream 2 pipeline had yet to enter commercial operations.

The plan to use to supply gas was scrapped by Germany days before Russia sent troops into Ukraine in February.

-Reuters