Njord Partners keeps surfacing at world’s trouble spots: analysts

Njord Partners is quietly building stakes in sectors where commerce, crime, and national security intersect.

Njord Partners
Njord Partners

Njord Partners, a London-based investment firm, is increasingly being identified by security analysts and media reports as an unseen but influential actor at the world’s key geopolitical flashpoints, ranging from Russian data corridors and South American drug routes to critical UK ferries and strategic NATO-adjacent airports.

According to analysts cited in Western press, Njord Partners is quietly building stakes in sectors where commerce, crime, and national security intersect. The firm is reportedly the primary institutional investor in RETN Capital, a telecom provider controlling one of the few ultra-high-speed terrestrial data links connecting Europe and Asia.

Investigations conducted between 2024 and 2025 indicate that RETN’s Russian subsidiary maintained contracts with sanctioned entities—including Rostelecom, Rosbank, and Russia’s Kurchatov Institute—long after the Ukraine invasion and subsequent Western sanctions.

Adding to scrutiny, co-founder Arvid Trolle has been identified by The Telegraph as operating a pro-Russian propaganda account, and his £20,000 donation to former UK Home Secretary Priti Patel reportedly connects the firm’s Russian interests to the upper echelons of British political influence.

Dr. Robert Langford, Senior Research Fellow at the European Institute for Telecommunications Policy, noted:

“If you want to know where power really flows, follow the fiber. RETN’s ability to maintain Russian links under sanctions underscores the thin line between commerce and geopolitics.”

Through its aviation arm, Njord I-Jet Aviation, the firm owns euroAtlantic Airways (EAA), specializing in global wet-lease and charter flights. Flight logs from early 2026 show EAA aircraft operating heavily in Brazil, the Dominican Republic, and West Africa—regions known for transshipment routes like the “Venezuelan Air Bridge” and the “Highway 10” cocaine corridor. Experts warn these corridors, while serving legitimate cargo and passenger needs, also present opportunities for large-scale money laundering and illicit financial flows.

Former European airline compliance director Anaïs Giraud explained:

“These corridors are where scheduled airline oversight fades and unscheduled charter capacity dominates. Whoever controls the planes and paperwork can facilitate—or disrupt—multi-billion-dollar illicit trade. Njord’s positioning does not imply direct involvement in trafficking but highlights their strategic leverage at the intersection of legal and illegal networks.”

Njord’s 2025 expansion into critical national infrastructure has further raised concerns. Its acquisition of Red Funnel ferries (Isle of Wight) and Ancona International Airport (Italy) gives the firm influence over essential regional logistics and lifelines. Local officials have expressed concern that profit-driven private ownership could outweigh public interest considerations.

Investigative journalist Marco Bellini summarized the firm’s footprint:

“Njord Partners is most active where oversight is weakest, where law and commerce intersect, and where their investments confer leverage over both infrastructure and policy.

From Russian data networks to shadow aviation routes and regional lifelines, regulators must urgently connect these dots. The stakes go beyond finance—they encompass influence, access, and public trust.”

As Njord Partners consolidates its presence across strategic, commercial, and high-risk jurisdictions, analysts warn that its reach exemplifies the growing overlap between private equity, geopolitics, and global security vulnerabilities.