Federal prosecutors take over investigation into Berlin power grid arson attack

In an update to the arson attack on a Berlin cable bridge claimed by the Volcano Group—which triggered the city's longest post-war power outage—the Federal Prosecutor's Office has assumed control of the probe. Suspected terrorist sabotage motives are under scrutiny as outages persist for over 25,000 households into day four.

The Saturday attack near the Lichterfelde gas plant initially blacked out 45,000 households and 2,200 companies. By Tuesday, 25,500 households and 1,200 businesses remained affected, but operator Berlin Stromnetz reports provisional cable works complete and restoration on track for Thursday, per CEO Bernhard Büllmann and Mayor Kai Wegner (CDU).

Federal prosecutors are investigating sabotage against the constitution, terrorist organization membership, arson, and public service disruption. Interior Senator Iris Spranger (SPD) confirmed the Volcano Group's authentic claim, 'Turning Off the Juice for the Rulers,' attacking fossil energy exploitation (e.g., 'In the greed for energy, the earth is exploited, sucked dry...'). The anarchist group, active in Berlin/Brandenburg since 2011, has claimed 11 criminal complexes.

Police have received dozens of tips (eight promising), secured extensive video, and dismissed online Russian involvement theories. The Interior Ministry will brief the Bundestag Interior Committee.

Aid continues with 24/7 public pools for showers, Bundeswehr emergency generators/food/transport, ~20 closed schools, and hotel reimbursements. The incident exposes grid vulnerabilities—public cable maps will be restricted, with plans for enhanced video, sensors, and AI detection. Interior Senator Spranger emphasized secrecy; expert Manuel Atug urges infrastructure redundancies instead.

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Arson-damaged cable bridge over Teltow Canal in Berlin, claimed by anarchist Vulkangruppe group, causing major power outage; firefighters and police at scene.
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Berlin power outage update: Anarchist group claims arson attack responsibility

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One day after an arson attack on a cable bridge over the Teltow Canal caused a major power outage in southwest Berlin, the left-extremist Vulkangruppe group has claimed responsibility, with authorities deeming the statement authentic. Governing Mayor Kai Wegner calls it terrorism. Partial reconnections are underway, but full restoration may take until Thursday.

Since early Saturday morning, around 45,000 households and 2,200 businesses in Berlin's southwest have been without power, caused by a fire on a cable bridge over the Teltow Canal. Police are investigating arson, and a claim of responsibility is under review. Power restoration could take until Thursday, January 8, 2026.

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Berlin's Governing Mayor Kai Wegner admitted playing tennis on the first day of a major power outage, while thousands suffered without electricity and heating. The incident, triggered by a suspected arson attack by left-extremist groups, has sparked sharp criticism and calls for his resignation. Wegner insists he remained reachable and continued working.

Top representatives of Germany's black-red coalition from CDU, CSU and SPD concluded their two-day talks on energy prices and social-tax reforms late Sunday night at Villa Borsig near Berlin. No results were disclosed immediately. It remains unclear if announcements will follow on Monday.

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Residents in Olievenhoutbosch and nearby Pretoria areas spent Christmas without electricity due to a fire at a local substation caused by cable theft and vandalism. The outage has lasted three days, affecting daily life and businesses. Repair work is underway by City of Tshwane technicians.

A major power outage struck parts of Södermalm and Gamla stan in Stockholm on Monday evening, leaving over 20,000 customers without electricity for nearly three hours. Power was restored just after 9:45 p.m. following manual repairs. The cause was a technical fault in a power cable.

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Security Minister Alejandra Monteoliva pledged 'no impunity' for those sparking Chubut's ongoing wildfires—95% human-caused—while federal teams combat flames affecting thousands of hectares. Route 40 reopened amid over 3,000 evacuations, but strong winds threaten further spread.

 

 

 

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