logo
NZ submarine cables are 'attractive espionage targets', officials warn

NZ submarine cables are 'attractive espionage targets', officials warn

Techday NZ28-04-2025

Officials have warned the prime minister that submarine cables are "attractive espionage targets".
Europe and the United States are taking measures to safeguard fibreoptic and other cables from what NATO has called "seabed warfare", though a recent investigation found no evidence of foul play in the Baltic Sea.
Christopher Luxon said last month a "new threat has emerged" around cables that the government would look to manage as best it could.
An Official Information Act response shows five briefings to Luxon since July 2024 that touch on cable security, the most recent on 20 March, but nearly all the information is withheld on national security grounds - even the titles of the documents.
One briefing was summarised, saying "the vast amount of data that transits submarine cables makes them attractive espionage targets".
However, it added the leading risk was from accidental damage or natural disasters, noting the eruption of an undersea volcano in January 2022 severed Tonga's only subsea cable, impeding both its own and international relief efforts.
Luxon was also told, "Disruptions to these services caused by damage to submarine cables can be highly detrimental" and, "Submarine cables can also be damaged during conflict"; all the accompanying advice was withheld.
Maritime New Zealand's guidance on cables stresses the law prohibiting fishing and anchoring in certain zones that could damage them, but nothing in the guidance online allows for deliberate sabotage or espionage.
Defence and Customs have just bought two marine drones that can patrol the coast for long periods, though their focus is drug smuggling, according to the government.
Cables were damaged in the Baltic Sea last year, amid a series of cable or pipe outages, and authorities voiced fears a Chinese ship dragged its anchor over them deliberately.
While an investigation was inconclusive, the NATO military alliance has put more frigates, aircraft and naval drones into the area.
The US has made recent moves to restrict China's laying cables and begun a review to tighten up the two-decade-old rules on subsea cables.
However, the way the largely private industry of subsea development and operation is set up currently gives the government little national security leverage, at a time when AI and datacentres are fuelling an explosion in data transfer.
The review by the Federal Communications Commission has proposed measures such as requiring companies that want to 'land' a cable to show a certified cybersecurity risk management plan, and setting up a new coordinating forum.
Yet the US did not include subsea cables as a standalone sector when it updated its critical infrastructure framework last year.
US commentators are now warning that cable sabotage will inevitably spread to the Middle East, that the vast majority of US military strategic communications is by the cables - and that most are in relatively shallow water of less than 400m, with their locations publicly available. There are calls for Washington to begin building partnerships to protect them.
New Zealand set up a new risk and resilience framework in December 2024; while it mentions critical infrastructure, subsea cables do not feature in the publicly-available official commentary on national security.
The new risk framework puts the Transport Ministry in charge of any big maritime security incident.
The country has laws that restrict marine activity around cable landing zones, such as at Takapuna. A ban on fishing or lowering anchors in a swathe of Cook Strait is monitored 24/7 by a cable patrol vessel. The country has also spent millions alongside Australia on expanding data cable access for Pacific islands.
"Cable and pipeline owners, such as Transpower, Spark and Southern Cross Cables, spend millions of dollars each year to protect the submarine cables and pipelines," said 2021 guidance from Maritime NZ.
"Any damage could take months to repair."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

PM Must Stop Changes Further Failing Children
PM Must Stop Changes Further Failing Children

Scoop

time4 hours ago

  • Scoop

PM Must Stop Changes Further Failing Children

Press Release – New Zealand Labour Party Christopher Luxon must step in and cancel boot camps and restore funding to frontline community providers before its too late, Labour childrens spokesperson Willow-Jean Prime said. Today's damning report on Oranga Tamariki shows Māori children are being left with little chance of success, or even survival, after their experiences in the state care system, and Minister for Children Karen Chhour is making it worse. 'This report is the first of its kind and reveals a disturbing and urgent problem which can no longer be ignored by the Prime Minister who has overseen dangerous changes to Oranga Tamariki during his term in government,' Labour children's spokesperson Willow-Jean Prime said. 'The Government has cut early intervention, continued with botched bootcamps that have never worked, and taken away funding from community-run services that help children and whānau. 'Christopher Luxon has allowed an ACT Minister to recklessly erode the services that have been built up to support children. 'As well as repealing Section 7AA, Karen Chhour has removed a key target for placement of children with whanau, and removed the target for investment for services provided by Iwi organisations. 'The Government has taken away actions specifically put in place to address the significant disparities for Māori children in care. 'Christopher Luxon must step in and cancel boot camps and restore funding to frontline community providers before it's too late,' Willow-Jean Prime said.

Documents Reveal Why Adrian Orr Suddenly Quit As Reserve Bank Governor
Documents Reveal Why Adrian Orr Suddenly Quit As Reserve Bank Governor

Scoop

time5 hours ago

  • Scoop

Documents Reveal Why Adrian Orr Suddenly Quit As Reserve Bank Governor

The Reserve Bank Governor resigned in March after seven years of service. The Reserve Bank has revealed a dispute over funding was behind Adrian Orr's abrupt resignation as governor. A raft of documents – released by the central bank under the Official Information Act – reveal an 'impasse' as Orr argued Finance Minister Nicola Willis was not providing enough funding for the next five years. In an accompanying statement, an RBNZ spokesperson said it became clear in late February that the board – chaired by Neil Quigley – was willing to agree to a 'considerably' smaller sum that Orr thought was needed. 'This caused distress to Mr Orr and the impasse risked damaging necessary working relationships, and led to Mr Orr's personal decision that he had achieved all he could as Governor of the Reserve Bank and could not continue in that role with sufficiently less funding than he thought was viable for the organisation.' Both sides engaged lawyers to negotiate an exit agreement, resulting in an immediate departure and 'special leave'. On 5 March, the Reserve Bank revealed Orr's sudden resignation, with three years still to run in his five-year term. At the time, Quigley said it was for 'personal reasons' but would not be drawn on any details. Orr had been expected to open a conference on 6 March with his resignation to be announced the following week, but that plan was nixed after Orr raised concerns that people were already aware of his intentions. Curiously, an email from Orr – shortly after midday on 5 March – indicated at that stage he intended to still attend the conference. 'I will proudly open the conference tomorrow morning, noting I am there to discuss today's news. I am proud to have worked with and for you all, and I know you will succeed ahead.' Orr ultimately did not attend or speak at the conference, nor did he take questions from media. The bank's statement also addressed speculation that the debate around banks' capital-holding was behind the resignation, saying the documents do not indicate those discussions were significant to Orr's decision.

New Zealand's sanctions on Israel too little, too late
New Zealand's sanctions on Israel too little, too late

RNZ News

time5 hours ago

  • RNZ News

New Zealand's sanctions on Israel too little, too late

Greens co-leader Chlöe Swarbrick has since December been urging the coalition to back her bill imposing economic sanctions on Israel. Photo: RNZ / Samuel Rillstone Opposition parties say the government should be going much further, much faster in sanctioning Israel. New Zealand's Foreign Minister Winston Peters overnight revealed New Zealand had joined Australia, Canada, the UK and Norway in imposing travel bans on Israel's Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich and National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir. Some of the partner countries went further, adding asset freezes and business restrictions on the far-right ministers. Peters said the pair had used their leadership positions to actively undermine peace and security and remove prospects for a two-state solution. Israel and the United States criticised the sanctions, with the US saying it undermined progress towards a ceasefire. Prime Minister Christopher Luxon, attending Fieldays in Waikato, told reporters New Zealand still enjoyed a good relationship with the US administration, but would not be backing down. "We have a view that this is the right course of action for us," he said. "We have differences in approach but the Americans are doing an excellent job of behind the scenes trying to get Israel and the Palestinians to the table to talk about a ceasefire." Asked if there could be further sanctions, Luxon said the government was "monitoring the situation all the time". Peters has been busy travelling in Europe and was unavailable to be interviewed. ACT - probably the most vocally pro-Israel party in Parliament - refused to comment on the situation. The opposition parties also backed the move, but argued the government should have gone much further. Greens co-leader Chlöe Swarbrick has since December been urging the coalition to back her bill imposing economic sanctions on Israel. With support from Labour and Te Pāti Māori it would need just six MPs to cross the floor to pass. Calling the Israeli actions in Gaza "genocide", she told RNZ the government's sanctions fell far short of those imposed on Russia. "This is symbolic, and it's unfortunate that it's taken so long to get to this point, nearly two years ... the Minister of Foreign Affairs also invoked the similarities with Russia in his statement this morning, yet we have seen far less harsh sanctions applied to Israel. "We're well past the time for first steps." The push-back from the US was "probably precisely part of the reason that our government has been so scared of doing the right thing", she said, calling it cowardice on the government's part. "What else are you supposed to call it at the end of the day?," she said, saying at a bare minimum the Israeli ambassador should be expelled, Palestinian statehood should be recognised, and a special category of visas for Palestinians should be introduced. She rejected categorisation of her stance as anti-semitic, saying that made no sense. "If we are critiquing a government of a certain country, that is not the same thing as critiquing the people of that country. I think it's actually far more anti-semitic to conflate the actions of the Israeli government with the entire Jewish peoples." Debbie Ngarewa-Packer says "it's not a war, it's an annihilation". Photo: RNZ / Samuel Rillstone Te Pāti Māori co-leader Debbie Ngarewa-Packer said the sanctions were political hypocrisy. "When it comes to war, human rights and the extent of violence and genocide that we're seeing, Palestine is its own independent nation ... why is this government sanctioning only two ministers? They should be sanctioning the whole of Israel. "These two Israel far right ministers don't act alone. They belong to an entire Israel government which has used its military might and everything it can possibly do to bombard, to murder and to commit genocide and occupy Gaza and the West Bank." She also wanted all diplomatic ties with Israel suspended, along with sanctions against Israeli companies, military officials and additional support for the international courts - also saying the government should have done more. "This government has been doing everything to do nothing ... to appease allies that have dangerously overstepped unjustifiable marks, and they should not be silent. "It's not a war, it's an annihilation, it's an absolute annihilation of human beings ... we're way out there supporting those allies that are helping to weaponise Israel and the flattening and the continual cruel occupation of a nation, and it's just nothing that I thought in my living days I'd be witnessing." She said the government should be pushing back against "a very polarised, very Trump attitude" to the conflict. "Trumpism has arrived in Aotearoa ... and we continue to go down that line, that is a really frightening part for this beautiful nation of ours. "As a nation, we have a different set of values. We're a Pacific-based country with a long history of going against the grain - the mainstream, easy grind. We've been a peaceful, loving nation that stood up against the big boys when it came to our anti nuclear stance and that's our role in this, our role is not to follow blindly." In a statement, Labour's foreign affairs spokesperson Peeni Henare said the actions of Smotrich and Ben-Gvir had attempted to undermine the two-state solution and international law, and described the situation in Gaza as horrific. "The travel bans echo the sanctions placed on Russian individuals and organisations that supported the illegal invasion of Ukraine," he said. He called for further action. "Labour has been calling for stronger action from the government on Israel's invasion of Gaza, including intervening in South Africa's case against Israel in the International Court of Justice, creation of a special visa for family members of New Zealanders fleeing Gaza, and ending government procurement from companies operating illegally in the Occupied Territories." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store