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UK plans tougher subsea cable laws

Ministers want tougher penalties for reckless subsea cable damage. The proposals would update Victorian-era law, strengthen security obligations, and give the UK more ways to respond when critical internet infrastructure is disrupted.

UK plans tougher subsea cable laws
Summary
  • The UK plans tougher fines and possible prison sentences for reckless or intentional damage to subsea internet cables.
  • Subsea cables carry more than 99% of international data traffic and underpin daily financial transactions, communications, and cloud services.
  • The proposals reflect a shift in digital infrastructure policy from connectivity expansion to resilience, deterrence, repair capacity, and hostile-state risk.

The UK government is preparing tougher legal protections for subsea internet cables, as ministers seek to close gaps in a 140-year-old legal framework and deter damage to infrastructure that carries most of the world’s digital traffic.

The Department for Science, Innovation and Technology said ship owners and operators that recklessly damage subsea cables could face stronger penalties, including tougher fines and prison sentences, under proposals set out by telecoms minister Liz Lloyd at the Royal United Services Institute.

The government plan is designed to replace Victorian-era legislation with clearer rules for incidents involving intentional or reckless damage. It also includes stronger security obligations and new powers to respond quickly when cable incidents occur.

Subsea cables are often treated as invisible infrastructure until something goes wrong. They carry more than 99% of international data traffic and support financial transactions, cloud services, phone calls, messaging, business software, and public-sector systems. For a services-heavy economy such as the UK, cable resilience is not a niche telecoms issue. It is part of the operating base for banking, logistics, software, government, media, and everyday work.

The policy push follows heightened concern about Russian activity around critical underwater infrastructure. The government has said hostile-state activity is growing, while Reuters reported that ministers are trying to remove a legal “grey zone” around suspected malicious activity and proxy behaviour. Russia has previously denied British claims that it has targeted or threatened subsea cables.

The challenge for policymakers is that most cable faults are not sabotage. They are caused by fishing activity, anchors, accidents, or routine maritime disruption. A resilience strategy therefore has to separate malicious activity from avoidable damage without creating a regime that is impossible for operators, vessel owners, and insurers to navigate.

That makes the consultation important for the telecoms, shipping, insurance, cloud, and financial-services sectors. Tougher penalties may help deterrence, but resilience will also depend on repair capacity, monitoring, information sharing, maritime enforcement, environmental approvals, and the availability of vessels able to respond quickly when damage occurs.

The government is also considering whether to establish a British-flagged repair ship. That detail points to a broader policy shift. Digital infrastructure resilience is no longer just about building more capacity. It is about who can fix the infrastructure, how fast they can do it, and whether the state has enough domestic capability when commercial incentives do not line up neatly with national security needs.

The proposals also sit alongside wider European concern about undersea infrastructure after incidents in the Baltic Sea and North Sea placed cables and pipelines into the security debate. For years, digital infrastructure policy was largely framed around broadband coverage, spectrum, and private investment. The current cycle is more geopolitical. Cables, data centres, satellite systems, cloud platforms, and chip supply chains are increasingly being treated as strategic assets.

There is a practical business consequence. More security obligations and faster response powers could affect compliance costs for cable owners and operators, while reforms to environmental approvals could change the pace at which new cables are laid. Enterprises will rarely buy connectivity by thinking about maritime law, but their exposure to cable outages is real through cloud availability, international payments, trading systems, customer service platforms, and cross-border data flows.

The UK’s proposals therefore mark a move from assuming that global connectivity is simply there to recognising that it has to be protected, repaired, and governed. The internet may look weightless on a screen. Its most important routes still run through steel, glass, ships, seabeds, and law.