At the height of the Cold War, Sweden invested massively in the construction of nuclear shelters across the country. However, it has been 15 years since the last shelter was built, with many others falling into disuse over recent decades. At present, Sweden's shelters have space for roughly 7 million people in the event of an attack, which is insufficient given the fact that the population has risen dramatically.
In its recent government-requested report, the MSB recommends building a further 50,000 bunkers over a ten-year period starting in 2019 in a project expected to set Swedish state coffers back a solid SEK 2 billion ($240 million). Apart from the Greater Stockholm area, the country's most populous, the project is expected to prioritize the island of Gotland, which was previously identified as a likely entry point of a "Russian aggression" and has been remilitarized for the first time in a decade, the Öresund region around Malmö's metropolitan area and, lastly, vast Norrbotten County in the far north, Swedish Radio reported.
Hur långt är det till närmaste #skyddsrum? Och hur kan det se ut i ett? Vi skapade karta och 360-bild åt @sr_ekot –
— Digitala insatssty.. (@InsatsstyrkanSR) October 30, 2017
https://t.co/2hCBEZq9ZS pic.twitter.com/HotEMU35vm
In addition to building new shelters, existing ones are in dire need of refurbishment, at an estimated cost of SEK 1 billion. These measures will include, among other things, improving ventilation and updating respiratory equipment.
Swedish Interior Minister Morgan Johansson contended that the money for this extravagance will be available as soon as next year.
"This is the first time in 15 years that we're spending so much money on civil defense — over SEK 400 million," Morgan Johansson told Swedish Radio, suggesting a rapid deterioration of the security situation compared with assessments made 15-20 years ago.
Var är ditt närmaste skyddsrum?
— Lew Anno (MOT)1540 (@anno1540) February 11, 2017
Sprid o dela#skyddsrum #krisberedskap #föpol https://t.co/J5GUwnMA1T pic.twitter.com/iMPgXY7UJZ
Sweden's other war preparations include reintroducing conscription earlier this year and significantly boosting its defense expenditure, which has shrunk from 3.1 percent of the country's GDP in 1981 to only 1.1 percent in 2016.