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European Tech Sovereignty
10JUN

56% of Russian crude on shadow tankers

4 min read
10:31UTC

Shadow tankers moved 56% of Russian crude in February while every Yamal LNG cargo reached the EU — one channel illegal, the other lawful under rules that expire in five weeks.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

EU legal carve-outs for existing LNG contracts have made the Yamal route sanctions-proof by design.

CREA found that 56% of Russian crude exports moved on sanctioned shadow tankers in February 2026, with 23 false-flag vessels delivering €800 million of crude 1. Separately, 100% of Yamal LNG cargoes reached EU ports that month — 1,543,347 tonnes worth approximately €690 million — the first time every cargo from the Arctic project made delivery since operations began in 2018 2.

The shadow fleet operates outside legal frameworks; the Yamal LNG trade operates within them. Glasgow-based Seapeak and Greek-registered Dynagas transported 17 of 21 February shipments, lawful under existing EU rules that exempt LNG from the sanctions applied to Russian crude and refined products 3. The EU's phased Russian gas ban begins with LNG on 25 April , five weeks away. The 100% delivery rate — achieved in a month when the sanctioned LNG carrier Arctic Metagaz was destroyed off the Libyan coast — suggests the remaining fleet is running at maximum throughput before the ban takes effect.

The shadow fleet presents a separate enforcement problem. The 23 false-flag vessels CREA identified carried crude worth €800 million in a single month. These ships use falsified registration, transponder manipulation, and ship-to-ship transfers in open water to move Russian oil past the $60 price cap. Western enforcement has focused on insurance restrictions and port-state controls, but the February data shows the fleet adapting faster than enforcement tightens. The destruction of the Arctic Metagaz demonstrated that physical interdiction is possible; the shadow fleet's 56% market share demonstrates it has not been sufficient.

Together, the two channels delivered approximately €1.49 billion to Russian coffers in February through maritime trade alone. Dmitriev's argument that global energy markets cannot remain stable without Russian supply gains traction precisely because the volumes are large enough to affect global pricing. The question for European policymakers is whether the 25 April LNG ban holds firm, or whether the same price pressures that prompted Washington's sanctions waiver generate European exemptions before the ink is dry.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Russia is moving oil on ships that Western countries have officially banned — but those ships keep sailing anyway using false paperwork, flag changes, and opaque ownership structures. Simultaneously, officially sanctioned Russian gas is still arriving in Europe perfectly legally, because contracts signed before the sanctions were grandfathered in. Two European companies — one Scottish, one Greek — transported most of those legal gas cargoes. So Russia is simultaneously operating through illegal shadow channels and fully legal European corporate channels, collecting revenue from both without interruption.

Deep Analysis
Synthesis

The co-existence of sanctioned shadow trade (56% of crude) and fully legal Yamal deliveries (100% of LNG) within the same reporting period reveals that EU sanctions architecture contains structural permission for significant Russian revenue while projecting maximum pressure publicly. The legal trade is proportionally more corrosive to sanctions credibility than the illegal trade — it is undeniable, involves named European companies, and reflects deliberate policy design rather than enforcement failure.

Root Causes

The Yamal LNG legal carve-out originated in Finnish lobbying during 2022 sanctions negotiations — Finland retained pipeline dependency that has since been resolved through other means, but the contractual exemption outlasted the rationale that created it. The deeper structural gap is that EU shipping sanctions use flag-state rather than operator-state definitions, creating a compliance pathway for EU-registered operators using non-EU-flagged vessels — the mechanism that allows Seapeak and Dynagas to operate within EU law.

Escalation

The 100% Yamal LNG delivery rate in February signals that European energy companies are maximising contracted volumes ahead of the 25 April ban — front-loading purchases that will create a supply discontinuity when the ban takes effect. European TTF gas futures are likely to spike in the April–June transition window as replacement supply contracts activate at higher spot premiums.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Front-loaded Yamal purchasing ahead of the 25 April ban may exhaust contracted volumes just as replacement supply contracts activate, creating a short-term supply cliff and price spike.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Precedent

    Shadow fleet resilience against vessel designations demonstrates that maritime sanctions require physical interdiction authority to be operationally effective — a precedent with implications for future sanctions regimes.

    Long term · Assessed
  • Consequence

    TotalEnergies' continued Yamal participation creates an unresolved tension between French corporate law obligations and French government Ukraine support that will intensify as the LNG ban approaches.

    Medium term · Suggested
  • Opportunity

    US LNG exporters stand to capture long-term European supply contracts as Yamal volumes are sanctioned, accelerating US energy export infrastructure investment and Atlantic energy market integration.

    Medium term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #5 · Trump frees 124m barrels; Russia earns €6bn

CREA / Urgewald· 18 Mar 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
56% of Russian crude on shadow tankers
Russia is moving the majority of crude exports outside the sanctions framework through shadow tankers while maximising legal LNG deliveries to Europe before the 25 April ban, delivering an estimated €1.49 billion in maritime energy revenue in February alone.
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