Britain's Bold Move to Protect Subsea Cables from Hostile Acts

Britain proposes tougher penalties, including prison sentences, for shipowners and operators who recklessly damage subsea internet cables. This is part of efforts to deter Russia and other hostile states from targeting vital national infrastructure. Subsea cables are crucial for international data traffic and financial transactions.


Devdiscourse News Desk | By Paul Sandle London | Updated: 29-05-2026 21:51 IST | Created: 29-05-2026 21:51 IST
Britain's Bold Move to Protect Subsea Cables from Hostile Acts
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The UK has announced plans to impose harsher penalties on those responsible for damage to subsea internet cables. The move aims to deter hostile states like Russia from undermining essential national infrastructure.

Subsea cables are integral, handling over 99% of international data, including £1.4 trillion in daily financial transactions. Last month, the UK spotlighted Russia's covert submarine activities near these critical infrastructures.

Telecoms minister Liz Lloyd emphasized the need to modernize outdated laws to ensure stronger deterrence. The government is also considering other protective measures, such as establishing a British-flagged repair ship and simplifying environmental regulations for new cable installations.

(With inputs from agencies.)

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