Russia has dispatched powerful icebreakers — including the nuclear‑powered Sibir — from Arctic waters to the Baltic Sea to help clear heavy ice and keep vital shipping lanes open amid one of the harshest ice seasons in over a decade, maritime officials said.
The Arktika‑class nuclear icebreaker Sibir, which has spent much of the past year operating along the Northern Sea Route, is sailing south through the Danish Straits to bolster icebreaking efforts in the Baltic. Alongside it, the conventional diesel icebreaker Murmansk is also being repositioned to assist. Both vessels are expected to arrive by the end of February and will supplement existing regional icebreaker fleets already hard at work near Russian ports.
The move follows a period of unusually severe ice formation across the Baltic Sea, which has hampered access to key maritime facilities and delayed ship movements, particularly for bulk and energy cargoes. Shipping operators in the region have reported bottlenecks, with ice‑bound approaches slowing traffic to and from major gateways.
Russia, which relies heavily on year‑round navigation to support exports of oil, coal and other commodities from its Baltic ports, said the deployment of Sibir and Murmansk will help break thick ice and maintain essential supply routes. Nuclear icebreakers like Sibir — capable of sustained icebreaking without refuelling — are critical for extreme winter conditions that exceed the capabilities of conventional vessels.
The harsh ice season has also seen neighbouring countries mobilise their own icebreaker fleets, with Finland, Sweden and Estonia committing multiple vessels to ice management operations. The latest developments underscore the importance of icebreaking capabilities for maritime commerce in northern Europe amid shifting climatic conditions.
