Whale stranded off German coast prompts race against time to save mammal’s life

independent.co.uk

Rescuers in Germany are racing to try to save the life of a whale stranded in shallow water on the coast.

Diggers have tried to dredge a channel into deeper waters to release the 33ft mammal back into the sea, but the sand was too compacted.

Experts say the chances of saving the humpback are slim, because after three days of being stuck on the beach, it will be exhausted.

The whale had fishing net wrapped around it. Rope was found in its mouth (AFP/Getty)

The whale, thought to be a young male weighing up to 15 tons, became stranded on Monday on the shore in Lübeck Bay, off Timmendorfer Strand on the north German coastline.

Low tides and stormy weather have hampered rescue efforts, and divers have been into the water to try to assess the animal’s state.

Sven Biertumpfel, of the Sea Shepherd marine conservation group, told Sky News if rescuers cannot move it, it will probably die there. He said it can take “up to a week or even longer” for an animal that size to suffocate.

He said the whale had previously become entangled in a fishing net. Some of the net was cut off, but rope is said to still be stuck in its mouth.

The water off north Germany is less salty than the North Sea or the Atlantic Ocean, so it’s bad for whales’ skin, which could lead to a potentially fatal infection, Mr Biertumpfel said.

“So every minute counts,” he added.

Boats have tried to create large waves to release the mammal ((c) Copyright 2026, dpa (www.dpa.de). Alle Rechte vorbehalten)

Marine biologist Robert Marc Lehmann told NDR the whale’s skin looked terrible but that the animal was responsive.

“It’s reacting, it has both eyes open, it’s vocalising, but it’s incredibly uncertain and it’s scared,” he said.

Boats from the coastguard and the fire department passed by to create large waves in the hope of freeing the animal, but without success.

Rescuers are reluctant to pull the animal out to deeper water for fear of injuring it.

An excavator lifts a pile of seabed as rescuers try to refloat the whale (Reuters)

“I hope the channel is deep enough that material will slide down and that this will motivate the whale to swim in. And if not, then he’ll have to be given a little nudge,” Mr Lehmann said.

A larger excavator has now been brought in to create a channel, according to a spokesperson for the municipality of Timmendorfer Strand.

The rescue efforts are being livestreamed from the seaside town in Schleswig-Holstein.

Scientists are unsure why whales become stranded but changes in their sea environments are suspected, including the climate crisis.

One study blamed changing Arctic ice cover and prey availability for gray whales washing up dead along the Pacific coast.