A display screen close to the Power Museum and Mindaugas Bridge signifies that on February 8 the Baltic States will disconnect from the Russian electrical energy grid to synchronise with Continental Europe, in Vilnius, Lithuania on Feb. 4, 2025.
Mindaugas Kulbis/AP
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Mindaugas Kulbis/AP
VILNIUS, Lithuania — Practically 3 1/2 many years after leaving the Soviet Union, the Baltic international locations of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania this weekend will flip a swap to finish electricity-grid connections to neighboring Russia and Belarus — and switch to their European Union allies.
The severing of electrical energy ties to oil- and gas-rich Russia is steeped in geopolitical and symbolic significance. Work towards it sped up after Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered his troops to invade Ukraine three years in the past, battering Moscow’s EU relations.
“This is physical disconnection from the last remaining element of our reliance on the Russian and Belarusian energy system,” Lithuanian President Gitanas Nausėda informed The Related Press in a current interview.
EU chief Ursula von der Leyen and different dignitaries are anticipated at a ceremony on Sunday as a specially-made 9-meter (29.5-foot) tall clock in downtown Vilnius counts down the ultimate seconds of the Baltic states’ electrical energy ties to Russia.
Chilly ties because the fall of the Soviet Union
The Baltic international locations, that are all NATO members, have usually had chilly ties with Russia since declaring independence from the USSR in 1990 — and relations soured additional over Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
Sixteen energy strains that used to attach the three Baltic states with Russia and Belarus had been dismantled over time as a brand new grid linking them with the remainder of the EU was created, together with underwater cables within the Baltic Sea.
On Saturday, all remaining transmission strains between them and Russia, Belarus and Russia’s Kaliningrad — a Russian exclave wedged between EU members Poland and Lithuania and the ocean — will likely be switched off one after the other.
Then, for twenty-four hours, the Baltic Energy System will function solo in an “island operation mode.” The subsequent day, the facility system is ready to merge with the Continental European and Nordic grids by way of a number of hyperlinks with Finland, Sweden and Poland.
The Kaliningrad area, which has no land ties to mainland Russia, already depends by itself energy era, based on Litgrid, Lithuania’s electrical energy transmission system operator.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov mentioned that the disconnection plan was introduced upfront by the Baltic international locations and the Russian vitality sector had taken preparatory steps to make sure easy operation on its aspect.
“Those plans were announced long time ago, and they required certain actions by our and their electric companies,” Peskov informed reporters. “We have taken all necessary measures to ensure reliable and uninterrupted operation of our unified energy system.”
Dangers of troublemaking?
The three Baltic international locations, which collectively share a 1,015-mile-long border with Russia and Belarus, formally knowledgeable Moscow and Minsk of the disconnection plan in July. Their nationwide transmission system operators credited 1.2 billion euros ($1.25 billion) in EU and different help to assist the international locations synchronize with the Continental Europe Synchronous Space.
“Lithuania has done a lot in the last 30 years to disconnect, to become independent,” Nausėda mentioned. Three years in the past, “we stopped buying any kind of energy resources from Russia. It was our response to the war in Ukraine.”
Regardless of the advance discover, the Baltic nations are nonetheless on look ahead to a attainable response from their former Soviet companions.
“The risk of cyberattacks remains substantial,” Litgrid mentioned final week, including that continued vigilance, collaboration, defensive steps and “robust” cybersecurity measures had been wanted to successfully mitigate potential threats.
Latvian Prime Minister Evika Siliņa warned Wednesday of attainable provocations, however mentioned Latvia was well-prepared and providers together with the armed forces and nationwide guard had been stepping up their vigilance and safety measures.
“Clearly there are risks, we understand that very well. But the risks are identified and there is a contingency plan in case these risks materialize,” Siliņa mentioned.
After the disconnection plans had been introduced, propaganda campaigns cropped up on social media and in printed leaflets in metropolis streets that issued fake-news warnings about blackouts, extreme vitality shortages and sky-high vitality payments for customers.
“We heard those rumors, but we are used to such things already” mentioned Jolanta Karavaitienė, a retired trainer, in central Vilnius. “Of course we must disconnect from them. Given the geopolitical situation, I see no reason for us to be there (in the Russian grid).”
Nonetheless, some within the area had been taking precautionary measures.
Estonia’s public broadcaster ERR has reported surging gross sales of turbines. Dwelling equipment chain Bauhof offered dozens extra turbines final month in comparison with January a yr in the past, and rival Ehituse ABC needed to restrict their purchases the report mentioned.
An extended highway towards vitality independence
The Baltic international locations’ steps towards vitality independence have been many years within the making.
In 2003, previous to becoming a member of the EU, Lithuania determined to close down the Soviet-built Ignalina nuclear energy plant in response to issues in Brussels over its security. It was decommissioned in 2009.
Lithuania constructed an offshore oil terminal within the Baltic Sea in 1999. Seven years later, it turned the nation’s sole crude oil import level after Russia’s shock transfer to halt provides of oil to Lithuania by way of Russia’s huge Druzhba pipeline community.
Rokas Masiulis, the CEO of Litgrid, mentioned Lithuania has “suffered a great deal” due to Russian actions up to now, corresponding to by way of halting oil provides and jacking up costs for gasoline that his nation as soon as trusted.
He mentioned Lithuania at the moment has “much more than we need” by way of electrical energy capability, from each fossil fuels but in addition more and more photo voltaic and wind. “So we are safe,” he mentioned.
The disconnection with Russia “is neither bad for them, (nor) bad for us,” Masiulis mentioned. “We were sort of interconnected and interdependent on each other. Now we will just part our ways.”
The three Baltic international locations have rebuilt energy strains and launched an unlimited development and reconstruction program to show their networks away from Russia and towards the West, the Litgrid CEO added, calling it a technological feat.
“Actions by Russia — by them being aggressive and pushing their neighbors — has really helped us,” Masiulis mentioned. “Maybe we’ve suffered a little with oil prices, with gas prices, but we were forced to act. So we built alternative routes.”
“Now we’re in much better state than we were before,” he added. “So maybe they wished us ill, but ultimately everything worked very well for us.”