- Project budget is about US$43m, including roughly US$16m from the EU’s Connecting Europe Facility.
- A separate Sweden–Finland link via Åland is due in 2026, with the wider ring completing by 2027.
What happened: Baltic ring, EU grant, 2026–27 build window
Nordic fibre operator GlobalConnect has kicked off permitting and seabed surveys for a set of Baltic subsea builds that, together with an inland leg, will form a 1,250km ring and expand backbone capacity by about 400%. The programme includes new systems linking Sweden, Estonia and Finland, plus route diversity around Stockholm and Gävle.
The company has already trailed a Sweden–Finland route via Åland slated for 2026; a press statement on MyNewsDesk outlines spans and upgrade works across sea and land. See press release and DataCenterDynamics coverage for route details and GlobalConnect’s current network footprint. Construction on the newer Baltic links is expected to run into 2027, subject to permits and marine windows.
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Why it’s important
A Baltic ring adds resilience for Nordic traffic as cloud and AI workloads grow. Extra paths reduce exposure to single-corridor outages and shorten routes to key hubs. But delivery will hinge on weather windows, cross-border permitting and ship availability—issues that have delayed other European sea-cable jobs. Power price volatility and long lead times for repeaters and fibre also test budgets set in euros, now presenteGlobalConnect Baltic subsea cable-EU CEF funding
There’s a security dimension too. Recent appeals for tighter coordination on subsea protection show why route diversity matters in the Baltic and North Seas. If GlobalConnect hits its 2026–27 milestones, carriers and hyperscalers get more options; if not, the region stays reliant on a smaller set of ageing paths just as demand accelerates.