3 Baltic states disconnect from the Soviet-era grid to merge with the
European energy system
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[February 08, 2025]
By LIUDAS DAPKUS
VILNIUS, Lithuania (AP) — The flow of electricity between the Baltic
countries of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania and Russia was officially
severed Saturday morning after officials switched off the Soviet-era
grid’s transmission lines and prepared to join the rest of Europe on
Sunday.
This came more than three decades after the collapse of the Soviet
Union, ending the Baltics' final ties to oil- and gas-rich Russia. For
the three countries, as well as the rest of Europe, the move was steeped
in geopolitical and symbolic significance.
“The Baltic energy system is finally in our hands, we are in full
control,” Lithuania Energy minister ˇygimantas Vaičiūnas told reporters.
On Saturday, all remaining transmission lines between them and Russia,
Belarus and the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad, wedged between EU
members Poland and Lithuania and the sea, were switched off one by one.
Lithuania first — where a specially-made 9-meter (about 29-foot) tall
clock in downtown Vilnius counted down the final seconds — then Latvia a
few minutes later, followed by Estonia.
For 24 hours after detaching from the Soviet-era grid, the Baltic Power
System will operate independently. If all goes as planned, the power
system will merge with the European energy networks on Sunday afternoon
through several links with Finland, Sweden and Poland.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, as well as the
presidents of Poland and the Baltic states, are expected for a ceremony
in Vilnius on Sunday evening along with other dignitaries.
The Baltic countries, which are all NATO members, have often had chilly
ties with Russia since declaring independence from the USSR in 1990 —
and relations soured further over Russia’s full-scale invasion of
Ukraine in 2022.
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A screen near the Energy Museum and Mindaugas Bridge indicates that
on February 8 the Baltic States will disconnect from the Russian
electricity grid to synchronise with Continental Europe, in Vilnius,
Lithuania, Tuesday, Feb. 4, 2025. (AP Photo/Mindaugas Kulbis)
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Sixteen power lines that used to connect the Baltic states with
Russia and Belarus were dismantled over in recent years as a new
grid linking them with the rest of the EU was created, including
underwater cables in the Baltic Sea.
“This is physical disconnection from the last remaining element of
our reliance on the Russian and Belarusian energy system,”
Lithuanian President Gitanas Nausėda told The Associated Press in a
recent interview.
The three Baltic countries, which together have a
1,633-kilometer-long (1,015-mile) border with Russia and Belarus,
informed Moscow and Minsk of the disconnection plan in 2024 to head
off any hostile reaction.
“We have a protocol with the Russians on how everything should be
disconnected,” Rokas Masiulis, CEO of Litgrid, told reporters on
Saturday.
Leaders of all three countries assured their nations that the shift
would go smoothly but special measures were taken to prevent
possible provocations.
In Latvia, the National Armed Forces and the National Guard were
instructed to carry on their duties in a reinforced mode. No
incidents were reported early Saturday.
The Kaliningrad region, which has no land ties to mainland Russia,
already relies on its own power generation, according to Litgrid.
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