Ukraine’s seaports
authority warned shipowners not to rely on a key navigation tool, as satellite communication systems are
increasingly being disrupted in the Black Sea.
To prevent accidents,
masters of vessels sailing to Greater Odesa “should be informed about the high
probability of losing satellite navigation and spoofing,” a branch of the
authority wrote in a letter to shipowners sent last week and seen by
Bloomberg.
While the letter did not name the source of the
disruption, Russia has been trying to obstruct various European
communication systems since its invasion of Ukraine. In the Black Sea, analysts say it’s primarily part
of Russia’s defense against Ukrainian drone attacks, but it may also impact
ships carrying commodities.
The disruption to
shipping signals in the Black Sea is “getting worse every day,” said
Ukraine-based Andriy Klimenko, head of the Monitoring Group of the Institute of
Black Sea Strategic Studies. Apart from “protecting their facilities from
Ukrainian missiles and drones,” the Russian military are also interfering with
Ukrainian exports and making it difficult to track Russian oil exports, he said. Ukraine’s seaports authority and
Russia’s defense ministry didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.
Ukraine is a major agricultural exporter, with ships often using satellite navigation to chart a course and
broadcast their location. While they can also use radar, maps or visual observations, those
signals are used by insurers, governments and commodity traders to track the
flow of goods.
The warning is the
latest sign of how signals disruption is impacting civilian and commercial
transport. Spoofing can cause tracking systems to receive false information
about the location of a ship, making it harder to tell where cargoes are really
going. Moscow’s efforts to jam Global
Positioning System signals have recently forced airline pilots in the
Baltic region and Finland to resort to alternative navigation methods.
Rather than individual
ships turning off tracking, the jamming or spoofing is affecting all ships in
the area, according to Klimenko. There
is no sign that the navigation problems are slowing exports so far, but they
may make it more difficult for ships to operate and to track commodities.
Kpler analyst Ishan
Bhanu estimates that at least 40 vessels in the Black Sea are currently
broadcasting a compromised AIS location, with about a third of ships loading
Russian coal showing an incorrect position. In recent months, ship-tracking systems have often shown vessels in impossible
locations, including on land in Crimea and even in a Moscow airport.