The KSE Institute (Kyiv School of Economics, glossed once) April 2026 Russian shadow fleet Tracker recorded 194 shadow-fleet tanker movements from Russian ports or ship-to-ship transfers in March 2026 1. Pacific ports accounted for 44 per cent of flows (1.3 million barrels per day of crude), and Baltic ports accounted for 33 per cent (1.0 million barrels per day). Beneath those flows, KSE recorded a nine-month re-flagging surge that took the Russian-flag share from 3 per cent of shadow-fleet vessels to 21 per cent.
The flag-of-convenience pattern has reversed. Vessels that previously flew Liberian, Maltese, or Marshall Islands flags to access Western insurance and port-state-control protection are now flying Russian flags by choice. The mechanism is defensive: a Russian-flagged tanker is outside the reach of EU port inspections that could detain Liberian-flagged vessels under maritime services regulations, and outside the reach of US Treasury subpoenas that target Western P&I clubs covering the cargo.
EU port inspections lose the leverage they had under Liberian or Maltese flags; the only remaining enforcement vector is the cargo buyer's bank. That same vector was illuminated by the Adani $275 million OFAC settlement for any Asian buyer holding completion risk on Russian cargoes loaded under the lapsed GL 134B waiver .
The data explains why Urals at $76 per barrel can persist $28 above the G7 cap without triggering immediate enforcement. The shadow fleet's defensive re-flagging means the cap framework's stated mechanism (Western insurance withdrawal forcing distress sales) is no longer operative for 21 per cent of the fleet and is steadily losing reach on the rest. Cap enforcement now relies on commodity-chain prosecution at the buyer end, which is slower, costlier, and produces precedents one at a time rather than at portfolio scale.
