Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
European Oil Markets
18MAY

Russian-flag shadow fleet share hits 21%

4 min read
17:30UTC

The KSE Institute's April 2026 Shadow Fleet Tracker recorded 194 Russian-port tanker movements in March as the Russian-flagged share of the shadow fleet jumped from 3 per cent to 21 per cent in nine months.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

Re-flagging pulls a fifth of the shadow fleet out of Western jurisdiction, shifting enforcement to the buyer's bank.

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.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

A 'shadow fleet' refers to the hundreds of oil tankers that Russia uses to export crude oil while avoiding Western sanctions. These ships typically lack Western insurance, avoid Western ports, and fly flags from small countries that do not enforce sanctions. In nine months, the share of shadow-fleet tankers flying the Russian flag itself jumped from 3% to 21%. Russian-flagged ships fall entirely outside Western legal and insurance systems, making them even harder to target with sanctions than ships registered in third countries. The KSE Institute in Kyiv tracks these movements to give sanctions enforcers a clearer picture of how Russia moves its oil.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The Russian-flagged fleet expansion is a direct operational response to the escalating EU vessel designation programme. With 632 vessels now designated under EU packages, effectively blocking Western P&I cover for listed hulls, Russia's tactical response is to move the most commercially critical vessels onto Russian registry, where they fall outside Western insurance jurisdiction entirely.

The Russian National Reinsurance Company (RNRC) provides the backstop cover, though its capital adequacy for catastrophic hull loss events remains a significant open question.

The Baltic sea route accounts for 33% of shadow-fleet crude flows (1.0mb/d) at the 21% Russian-flag rate, meaning the most strategically critical export corridor is now anchored to Russian-registry vessels, where Western enforcement leverage through insurance, classification, and P&I club membership is structurally absent.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Western P&I enforcement leverage over 540,000 bpd of Russian crude flows has been structurally eliminated by the 3%-to-21% Russian-flag shift, reducing the practical effect of further Western vessel designation expansions.

    Immediate · 0.8
  • Risk

    Russian National Reinsurance Company's capital adequacy for a catastrophic hull loss on a Russian-flagged VLCC has not been independently verified; a major incident could expose the gap between RNRC nominal cover and actual payout capacity.

    Medium term · 0.6
  • Precedent

    Russia's successful domestic registry expansion will be studied by Iran, Venezuela, and other sanctioned producers as a replicable model for moving crude-transport assets outside Western insurance jurisdiction.

    Long term · 0.7
First Reported In

Update #1 · GL 134B out, Rotterdam dark, OPEC+ pending

Kyiv School of Economics· 18 May 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Russian-flag shadow fleet share hits 21%
Defensive re-flagging pulls vessels further out of Western P&I reach and port-state-control jurisdiction, replacing Liberian and Maltese cover with sovereign Russian protection.
Different Perspectives
Russian export ministry / Rosneft
Russian export ministry / Rosneft
Urals at $76/bbl against the $47.60 cap and the shadow fleet's Russian-flagged share at 21% shows Moscow absorbed the price-cap constraints by re-flagging out of Western P&I reach. The GL-134B lapse removes the residual Western-insurance buffer from the transition period, accelerating a re-flagging trajectory that was already structurally in motion.
Adani Enterprises / Indian commodity buyers
Adani Enterprises / Indian commodity buyers
Adani's $275m OFAC settlement for 32 Iran-LPG violations, announced 18 May, landed two days after GL-134B expired and recalibrated the risk calculus for every Indian buyer weighing completion of a Russian cargo loaded under the lapsed waiver. Indian refiners accessing Russian crude through third-country intermediaries now face the same commodity-chain prosecution risk that Adani's settlement has just made explicit.
Asian sovereign wealth and commodity-fund buyers
Asian sovereign wealth and commodity-fund buyers
Fujairah stocks at a record-low 6.5mb with fuel oil -27% May versus April compounds the Hormuz crude premium for any buyer routing VLCC cargoes away from the Gulf. TD3C at WS458 and Brent-Dubai EFS above $6/bbl make Cape-rerouted Atlantic barrels the expensive but operative alternative, with ~50 VLCCs already adding roughly 50,000-70,000 tonnes of incremental distillate demand per round trip.
FuelsEurope / EU Council sanctions directorate
FuelsEurope / EU Council sanctions directorate
GL-134B's lapse turns every Russian cargo nomination into an individual OFAC assessment while the EU 20th package (23 April, 632 vessel listings) waits on G7 alignment before the maritime-services ban phases in. ARA gasoil at 13.56mb and Med distillate imports at a dataset-high 1.9mb/d signal refining margin support will outlast the near-term inventory draw.
OFAC / US Treasury
OFAC / US Treasury
Treasury's decision not to issue GL-134C and to post the $275m Adani settlement two days after GL-134B expired signals a deliberate shift from waiver-based transition management to commodity-chain prosecution as the primary Russia oil-revenue-suppression tool. The enforcement ledger, not the cap number, is now the operative constraint on participation.
Goldman Sachs London commodity research
Goldman Sachs London commodity research
Goldman's London energy desk issued a Q4 2026 Brent forecast of $90/bbl on tighter Gulf output from the UAE exit and Hormuz closure, implying $17/bbl of negative carry for anyone buying Q2 forward for Q4 on a Hormuz-normalisation assumption. The forecast aligns with the EIA STEO Q4 print of $89/bbl and sets the sell-side consensus on reversion timing.