[analyse_image type=”featured” src=”https://images.euronews.com/articles/stories/09/72/60/45/1200x675_cmsv2_d5206470-cf91-5861-ae5d-4ce6be11a5b4-9726045.jpg”]

World Urban Forum opens in Baku with warning on global housing divide

Modi in Sweden: Von der Leyen lauds ‘new era’ in EU-India relations

Latest news bulletin | May 17th, 2026 – Evening

Terrorism scenario excluded following Modena car attack

World Urban Forum opens in Baku with warning on global housing divide

Modi in Sweden: Von der Leyen lauds ‘new era’ in EU-India relations

Latest news bulletin | May 17th, 2026 – Evening

Terrorism scenario excluded following Modena car attack
Whale Timmy is dead, GPS tracker confirms identity

Timmy the humpback whale
– Copyright (c) Copyright 2026, dpa (www.dpa.de). Alle Rechte vorbehalten
For days, it remained unclear whether the whale found dead off the Danish coast was Timmy. Authorities have now confirmed that the well-known humpback whale did not survive his journey through the Baltic Sea.
After several days of uncertainty, authorities have confirmed that the dead whale stranded off a Danish island is the humpback whale known as “Timmy”.
The confirmation came from Denmark’s Environmental Protection Agency, according to the Ritzau news agency, with broadcaster TV 2 among the first to report it.
Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania’s Environment Minister Till Backhaus has since also confirmed the whale’s death.
Denmark’s nature protection agency, Miljøstyrelsen, said a GPS transmitter was found on the carcass, confirming it was the same humpback whale previously sighted in the Baltic Sea and later stranded off the German coast.
“We can now confirm that the humpback whale stranded off Anholt is the same whale that had previously stranded in Germany,” agency head Jane Hansen said in a written statement.
Authorities have so far been unable to recover the GPS device because of poor weather conditions.
The whale had been released just two weeks ago following a dramatic and highly debated rescue operation after repeatedly becoming stranded along Germany’s Baltic Sea coast, authorities said on Saturday.
Timmy was first spotted off the German coast on March 3. It remains unclear why the humpback whale entered the Baltic Sea, a region far outside its natural habitat and poorly suited to the species. Some marine experts believe the animal may have become disoriented while following shoals of herring or during migration.
Go to accessibility shortcuts
Read more
End of the rescue operation: Humpback whale “Timmy” released in the North Sea
Timmy the stranded whale is finally on his way home thanks to entrepreneur-funded rescue
German bid to rescue ‘Timmy’ the whale stranded off Baltic coast passes key hurdle

Drone strike hits UAE nuclear plant perimeter, fire reported

One of Ukraine’s largest drone attacks kills 3, Russia says

Wes Streeting calls Brexit a ‘catastrophic mistake’

Conservatives near majority in Andalusia as Socialists hit record low

Modi in Sweden: Von der Leyen lauds ‘new era’ in EU-India relations
Bulgaria wins Eurovision 2026 as public push Israel into second place
Why experts predict a looming surge in solar panel prices
One of Ukraine’s largest drone attacks kills 3, Russia says
Watch: Tears and confetti as Bulgaria’s Dara lifts Eurovision trophy
China unveils a giant rideable robot straight out of sci-fi movie
[analyse_source url=”https://www.euronews.com/my-europe/2026/05/16/whale-timmy-is-dead-gps-tracker-confirms-identity”]