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Sweden fears that wind power plants will not allow the Patriot system to detect ...

Russia interferes with and threatens war: in the EU are afraid to unfold wind turbines in the sea

Sweden fears that wind power plants will not allow the Patriot system to detect Russian submarines, drones and planes in time. Sweden has vetoed plans to install 13 wind power plants in the Baltic Sea, referring to the unacceptable risks of safety created by the Russian Federation. About it writes theGuardian. com. Country Minister Paul Joneson said the government had rejected plans for all other than one, which was previously planned to be installed along the east coast.

The decision was made after the Swedish Armed Forces last week concluded that these projects would complicate the protection of a new NATO member. "The government believes that the construction of current projects in the Baltic Sea will have unacceptable consequences for the defense of Sweden," Jonson said at a press conference.

The proposed winds should have been located between the ALANDS ARELES, the Autonomous Finnish region between Sweden and Finland, and Zundom, the strait between Southern Sweden and Denmark. The Russian Edsklav Kaliningrad is located only 500 km from Stockholm. Installations can affect Sweden's defense and complicate the detection of submarines with sensors and radars, as well as possible attacks from the air, in the event of the war, Jonson said.

The only project that received the green light was Poseidon, which will contain up to 81 wind turbines for the production of 5. 5 terades-hours a year near Stanungus on the west coast of Sweden. The country uses the Patriot system and fears that if windmills are on the path of sensors, then the detection of threats will not be so effective.

Earlier this year, the NATO NATO Commander said that the security of almost a billion people throughout Europe and North America is threatened because of Russia's attempts to attack underwater infrastructure, including windy power plants.

Admiral Didier Mletter, Deputy Commander of the United Navy (Marcom), said Guardian in April: "We know that the Russians have developed many hybrid methods of warfare underwater to disturb the work of the European economy by damaging cables, online cables , pipelines. Earlier, we wrote that a Ukrainian tried 4 years tried to launch a wind turbine. Tanasius Kuchuryan bought a turbine to have his own electricity for the home, and to sell excess network, but it was not easy to start the station.