Sanctioned Russian LNG Spotted Near China on US-Sanctioned Tanker CCH Gas

Tanker Carrying Sanctioned Russian LNG Spotted Near China

China has made greater efforts to purchase blacklisted Russian gas, even as Western nations try to make it tougher to do so.

A tanker carrying US-sanctioned Russian liquefied natural gas (LNG) and masking its location was spotted near China, according to SynMax, suggesting Beijing is stepping up its efforts to buy the fuel. The ship, CCH Gas, has been signalling that it is near the eastern coast of Malaysia since late October, apparently “spoofing” its location, a common dark-fleet tactic to avoid detection.

Ship’s Location Revealed by Satellite Images

Satellite images taken by Copernicus Sentinel-2 on November 9 also show the ship going to southern China, according to Bloomberg analysis. CCH Gas is heading towards the Beihai import terminal in the Guangxi region, which Beijing has designated as the sole entry point for sanctioned Russian gas.

Ship-to-Ship Transfer Suggests Sanctioned Fuel Transfer

In mid-October, satellite images showed CCH Gas alongside a tanker that ship-tracking data indicated was the Perle, which was carrying LNG from Russia’s Portovaya plant, which was blacklisted by Washington in January. The positioning was typical of a ship-to-ship transfer, and suggests CCH Gas was in the process of receiving sanctioned fuel.

China’s Efforts to Purchase Blacklisted Russian Gas

China has made greater efforts to purchase blacklisted Russian gas, even as Western nations try to make it tougher to do so. Another US-sanctioned plant, Arctic LNG 2, started delivering blacklisted fuel to China in late August.

Original Article: Tanker spoofing its location seen taking sanctioned LNG to China — Straitstimes