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Wind turbines in British waters.
Russia

Russian 'spy' ship off British coast aims to sabotage key energy base, EU broadcasters claim

A report by broadcasters in Denmark, Sweden, Finland and Norway claims the Admiral Vladimirsky was mapping British undersea infrastructure.

A RUSSIAN “SPY” ship stopped at sites off the coast of Britain as part of plans to sabotage key energy infrastructure, an investigation by European broadcasters claims.

A joint report by broadcasters in Denmark, Sweden, Finland and Norway claims the Admiral Vladimirsky was part of an operation to map undersea infrastructure.

According to the report, the ship sailed around the Baltic Sea and the North Sea for a month, passing current and future wind farms off the coast of several Scandinavian countries, as well as Britain.

The broadcasters say that the ship is part of a fleet of espionage boats, disguised as fishing trawlers and scientific research vessels, which is examining key energy sites for possible sabotage.

Danish broadcaster DR has published video of an encounter at sea between a small boat carrying their team and the Russian ship, filmed off the Danish coast in November.

It shows a man, wearing a balaclava and military gear and carrying an assault rifle, appearing on the deck of the Admiral Vladimirsky.

The ship is thought to have entered the Moray Firth, off the coast of Scotland, on November 10th last year.

Chairman of the Commons Defence Committee Tobias Ellwood told The Telegraph that the UK must expand its armed forces in response.

“We simply can no longer protect our near seas and, rightly, step forward further afield, with our current peacetime-sized Navy, Army and Air Force,” he said.

An MoD spokesman said: “The Government takes the security and resilience of our national infrastructure very seriously.

“That is why we increased Royal Navy presence patrols after the Nord Stream incident and have invested £65 million in the first of our two Multi-Role Ocean Surveillance ships.

“We continue to review all our investments and activities against the full range of threats and risks.”

Offshore Energies UK (OEUK), the trade body for the offshore sector, said the safety of their installations was a matter of ongoing discussion with the Government.

Operations director Mark Wilson said: “Offshore Energies UK remains engaged with relevant Government bodies, including the Department for Energy Security & Net Zero (formally BEIS); North Sea Transition Authority; Health & Safety Executive; and Police Scotland, on resilience and security of UK energy supply.

“We also operate the OEUK security committee at which relevant Government bodies provide briefings.

“The physical security of offshore and onshore energy infrastructure continues to be part of these regular engagements.”

Irish waters

Earlier this month, the Irish Defence Forces said that commercial ships from Russia which were being monitored in Ireland’s Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) had left.

The ships were off the west coast seeking shelter from bad weather and it is understood they were making their way south to Africa where the ship’s owners are engaged with an oil production facility, a source told The Journal.

Ireland’s EEZ extends 320 km off the coast, except for areas in the Irish Sea where the EEZ is smaller because it borders the UK’s.It was feared that the vessels may have been engaged in other clandestine operations for the Russian State, but a Defence Forces spokesperson said it had “monitored” the ships and established that most likely they were not.

Additional reporting by Mairead Maguire

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