According to the operator, the pressure drop in the Nord Stream 2 Baltic Sea pipeline, which is not used for gas deliveries, is the result of a gas leak southeast of the Danish island of Bornholm.

In cooperation with the authorities, Denmark's exclusive economic zone had been identified as the location of a possible exit, Nord Stream 2 AG announced on Monday afternoon.

The responsible authorities have therefore set up a security zone as a precautionary measure.

The investigations continued.

The competent Danish authority issued a corresponding notice on Monday afternoon.

A gas leak was observed.

The leak is said to be dangerous to navigation and navigating within five nautical miles of said position is prohibited.

According to the operator, there was a pressure drop in the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline on Monday night.

A pressure loss was found in Tube A, and the responsible naval authorities in Germany, Denmark, Sweden, Finland and Russia were informed immediately, said the spokesman for the pipeline operator Nord Stream 2 AG, Ulrich Lissek, on Monday.

Little impact on marine environment

According to the German Environmental Aid (DUH), a leak in the gas pipeline would have little impact on the marine environment in the Baltic Sea.

Natural gas is methane, which partially dissolves in water and is not toxic, a DUH spokesman said on Monday in Berlin.

The greater the water depth at which gas is released, the higher the proportion of the greenhouse gas that is dissolved in the water.

The double strand of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline runs 1,230 kilometers from Russia through the Baltic Sea to Germany.

She is completed and filled with gas, but she has never imported gas.

The federal government had put the approval process for the completed line on hold in February shortly before the Russian attack on Ukraine and even then emphasized that commissioning was out of the question.

Shortly before the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the United States imposed sanctions on Nord Stream 2 AG and made all transactions with the Swiss-based company impossible.

Only recently was an impending bankruptcy averted again.

The responsible court extended a provisional debt restructuring moratorium until January 10, 2023. Creditors will not be able to collect any money with it until at least January.

A trustee appointed by the court can examine whether a reorganization or an agreement with the creditors has a chance of success.

If this is not the case, bankruptcy proceedings must be opened under Swiss law.