Public AIS (Automatic Identification System) signals from vessels in the Baltic Sea (53–62°N, 18–32°E). Each signal contains MMSI, position, speed, course, and vessel name.
Data source
AIS data providers — publicly available vessel tracking feeds
Unique vessel count near each country’s waters (Estonia: 57.5–60°N, 21.5–28°E)
Baltic-wide total for regional context
Proximity to critical infrastructure — gas pipelines, power cables, data cables
Why it matters
Vessel activity near critical Baltic infrastructure — gas pipelines (Balticconnector), power cables (EstLink), data cables — can indicate surveillance or preparation for sabotage. The Russian shadow fleet operating in the Baltic adds additional concern.
Limitations
Ships can disable AIS transponders — shadow fleet vessels frequently do
AIS data can be spoofed (fake positions)
High vessel counts don’t necessarily indicate threat — commercial shipping is the majority