The European Union and NATO must strengthen cooperation to protect critical energy infrastructure from attacks, which pose a ...
The flow of electricity between the Baltic countries of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania and Russia has been officially severed.
NATO is ratcheting up its guard against suspected attempts to sabotage underwater energy and data cables and pipelines that ...
Nearly 3 1/2 decades after leaving the Soviet Union, the Baltic countries of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania this weekend will flip a switch to end electricity-grid connections to neighboring Russia and ...
In the Baltic Sea, a new probable break in an underwater cable has been discovered. The damage reportedly occurred to an ...
The decoupling means Russia’s Kaliningrad exclave, located between Lithuania, Poland and the Baltic Sea, is cut off from Russia’s main grid — it must now maintain its power system alone.
The sea is oily and the temperature is close to zero degrees Celsius, which is surprisingly mild weather in early February in Klaipeda, Lithuania's main port on the Baltic. Standing 40 meters high ...
Lithuania, which, like Sweden, is a NATO member, has seen its own underwater sea links in the Baltic targeted. Mr Landsbergis says other incidents in the country, such as a seemingly-random fire ...
For Russia, the decoupling means its Kaliningrad exclave, located between Lithuania, Poland and the Baltic Sea, is cut off from Russia's main grid, leaving it to maintain its power system alone.
"Recent incidents involving undersea infrastructure in the Baltic Sea provide a matter of great ... no incidents related to the grid switch. Lithuanian engineer Aras Valiukas, 45 called the ...
More than three decades after leaving the Soviet Union, Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania have begun to unplug from ...