The EU 20th sanctions package, adopted by EU Council on 23 April and operative from 25 April, banned EU yards from servicing Arc7 ice-class LNG carriers 1. Six named vessels are due for dry-dock across summer 2026: Rudolf Samoylovich, Georgiy Brusilov, Boris Davydov, Vladimir Vize, Nikolay Zubov, and Nikolay Yevgenov. All six were last serviced in France or Denmark in 2023, on the standard three-year ice-class certification cycle.
Operators face a binary fork on operating mechanics: reach non-EU yards in Singapore, China or the UAE inside the summer window, or push servicing into the 2026/27 Arctic operating season after sea ice returns. Push the work past the window and an ice-class certification gap opens at the moment the vessel most needs it. If even two or three of the six fail to secure servicing, Yamal LNG breakdown risk rises sharply through next winter. EU Council blocked the full maritime services ban at adoption ; only the Arc7-specific maintenance ban passed. That partial scope concretes the risk: the chokepoint sits on yard access, not vessel certification.
This sits outside every published EU refill model. Bruegel's three-scenario refill model prices LNG cargo costs at given TTF levels; the ACER modelling prices a 26 bcm Qatar-offline shortfall. Neither prices supply continuity for Russian Arctic LNG flow that the EU is gradually choking through a maintenance side-door. Even if EU storage lands at 80% on 1 November, winter 2026/27 reliability still depends on volumes the sanctions architecture is now indirectly disrupting.
