The EU Council adopted the 20th Russia sanctions package on Thursday 23 April 1. Two days later, on Saturday 25 April, the package's Arc7 LNG tanker and icebreaker maintenance ban entered force, the same day the Russian LNG short-term contract ban , took effect.
Arc7 is the icebreaker-class hull rating the Yamal LNG Arctic export facility relies on to move cargoes through ice-bound seasons of the Northern Sea Route. The Arc7 ban was proposed in the package flagged on 25 April and is now operative. Hill Dickinson noted that six Arc7 vessels are due dry-dock across the next maintenance cycle and lose access to EU yards, the only European maintenance infrastructure rated for the class. That narrows Yamal LNG's Arctic export availability in the late-2026 maintenance window. The package also added 46 shadow-fleet vessels to the port-access ban and introduced a mandatory "no Russia" clause on EU tanker sales to third countries, designed to stop second-hand sales rebuilding the shadow fleet through European yards.
The full maritime services ban on Russian crude and petroleum products was the package's headline target and failed for want of unanimity. Hungary was identified in earlier reporting as the blocking party; Hill Dickinson noted the measure remains on hold 2. The blockage matters because the maritime services ban is the chokepoint instrument the Commission has designed to attack the shadow-fleet insurance and reflagging chain; without it, the 46 vessel addition to the port-access ban is a partial remedy, not a structural one. Arctic LNG capacity tightens; refined-product and crude flows through shadow-fleet hulls do not.
The legislative calendar has a domestic political edge that the Brussels readout does not show. Hungary's blocking vote landed inside a fortnight that also produced the Druzhba pipeline restart and the MOL infringement decision, all running off the same domestic political reset. Péter Magyar took office on 12 April; the pipeline resumed flow on 22 April; the maritime ban failed for unanimity 23 April. Whether the next sanctions iteration revisits the maritime services ban with revised text or trades it for asset-freeze tightening is the live operational question for European refiners watching primary-product flows.
