Keir Starmer announced at the JEF summit in Helsinki on 26 March that the Royal Navy is authorised to board and interdict sanctioned shadow fleet vessels in British territorial waters 1. The English Channel is now effectively closed to the more than 600 tankers sanctioned by the EU, UK, and US combined 2.
This is the most aggressive European enforcement action against Russia's oil revenue infrastructure since the war began. Previous seizures of individual vessels, the Ethera in Belgian waters , the Caffa and Sea Owl I off Sweden , , were opportunistic. Channel interdiction is structural: it forces sanctioned tankers to circumnavigate Britain, adding over 2,000 nautical miles and several days to each voyage.
For shadow fleet operators, that means tens of thousands of dollars in extra fuel and crew costs per trip, eroding the margin between sanctioned-price oil and market price. The Channel's shallow, narrow waters (34 kilometres at Dover) make boarding operationally straightforward compared to open-ocean enforcement. Shadow fleet vessels are typically older, under-insured, and crewed by mariners with limited consular protection. Geography and legal vulnerability combine to make this chokepoint uniquely enforceable.
The EU had already signalled a shift from chasing individual ships to targeting operators, brokers, and registries . Britain's naval enforcement adds a physical barrier to that administrative squeeze. Denmark controls the only alternative short route through the Danish Straits; if Copenhagen follows London's lead, the last short northern European passage for shadow fleet traffic closes.
