Danish and Swedish authorities have issued navigation warnings after two gas leaks were identified on the Nord Stream 1 pipeline, which the Kremlin shut down earlier this month for an indefinite period of time in retaliation for Western sanctions. The warnings came shortly after a separate gas leak was detected on a second pipeline, Nord Stream 2, a highly controversial project that was frozen by the German government days prior to Russia's invasion of Ukraine and never became operational. Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen said sabotage could not be excluded as an explanation for the events. "It is too early to conclude yet, but it is an extraordinary situation," she said, speaking to reporter in Poland. "There are three leaks, and therefore it is difficult to imagine that it could be accidental." The European Commission said it was still premature to speculate. "We are following developments very closely," a spokesperson said, noting the negative impact of leaked methane on the environment. "This hasn't affected our security of supply as of yet." Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov called the news "very concerning" and said no option should be "ruled out right now," including sabotage. Neither pipeline is currently carrying gas to Europe, although a certain level of supplies remains inside the infrastructure. The cause behind the leaks was not immediately clear. An investigation is under way. "The damage that occurred in one day simultaneously at three lines of offshore pipelines of the Nord Stream system are unprecedented," said Nord Stream AG, the consortium responsible for the pipelines. "It is impossible to estimate the timeframe for the recovery of the gas transport infrastructure so far." The first leak, through Nord Stream 2, was detected on Monday evening in the pipeline's Danish section of the Baltic Sea, around the island of Bornholm, after a "major pressure drop." The Danish Maritime Authority released a navigational warning and established a prohibitive zone within five nautical miles (around 9 km) from the site, considering the leak could pose a danger to naval traffic. The German government got in touch with the Danish authorities to find out the reasons behind the issue. Hours later, two leaks were identified on Nord Stream 1, one in the Danish economic zone and another one in the Swedish economic zone of the Baltic Sea. "Breakage of gas pipelines is extremely rare, and therefore we see reason to raise the preparedness level as a result of the incidents we have seen over the past 24 hours," said Kristoffer Bötzauw, director of the Danish Energy Agency. The agency put the country's energy sector on "orange" alert, the second highest level, and insisted security of supply was not at risk. However, leaked gas can entail safety and health consequences for travellers and also ignite above water and in the air, causing explosions, it noted. Sweden reacted in a similar manner and issued a navigation warning, asking vessels to keep a "safe distance" from the five nautical mile radius. The Swedish Maritime Administration also sent a warning for aircraft, introducing a safety altitude of 1,000 meters above the concerned areas. Germany has too taken precautionary measures. "We still have no clarity about the causes and the exact facts," a spokesperson for Germany's federal Ministry of Economic Affairs and Climate Action told Euronews. "A no-fly zone has been established around the area for security reasons — the area is closed to shipping." Nord Steam 1 has the capacity to carry up to 170 million cubic meters of gas per day (or 55 billion cubic meters per year). Russia has been accused of manipulating flows after being hit with EU sanctions in the aftermath of the Ukraine war. Flows reached 20% of total capacity in the summer before the pipeline was totally shut down. Nord Steam 2 was supposed to double this capacity to an annual 110 billion cubic meters. The leaks took place hours before the opening ceremony of the Baltic Pipe, a brand new route to carry gas from Norway to Denmark and Poland. — Euronews