EU targets Russia's LNG ghost fleet in new round of Ukraine war sanctions

EU estimates that about 4-to-6 billion cubic metres of Russian LNG was shipped to third countries via EU ports last year

European Union, EU
European Union on Monday slapped new sanctions on Russia over its war on Ukraine. Photo: Shutterstock
AP Brussels
2 min read Last Updated : Jun 24 2024 | 3:03 PM IST

The European Union on Monday slapped new sanctions on Russia over its war on Ukraine, targeting Moscow's shadow fleet of tankers moving liquefied natural gas through Europe as well as several companies.

In a statement issued at a meeting of EU foreign ministers, the bloc said that it will forbid reloading services of Russian LNG in EU territory for the purpose of transshipment operations to third countries.

The EU estimates that about 4-to-6 billion cubic metres of Russian LNG was shipped to third countries via EU ports last year.

Russia is suspected of running a ghost fleet to evade sanctions and keep up the flow of energy earnings so that it can finance the war.

The measures will target ship-to-ship and ship-to-shore transfers as well as reloading operations. It also involves a crackdown on the re-export of LNG to third countries via the EU, plus a ban on new investments to help Russia complete LNG projects it is working on.

A total of 61 new entities often companies, banks, agencies and other organisations were added to the EU's list, including a number of them in China, Turkiye and the United Arab Emirates. Many are accused of circumventing the bloc's sanctions or providing sensitive equipment to Russia.

Around 50 more officials are also being targeted with asset freezes, as well as travel bans. Russian President Vladimir Putin and Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, as well as scores of lawmakers and several oligarchs are among more than 1,700 people already listed by the EU.

The more than 400 entities previously hit include companies working in the military, aviation, shipbuilding and machine sectors, the Wagner mercenary group, political parties and banks. Around 210 billion euros (USD 225 billion) worth of Russian Central Bank assets are blocked in the EU.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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Topics :European UnionRussiaRussia Ukraine ConflictUkraine

First Published: Jun 24 2024 | 3:03 PM IST

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