Russia Adds LNG Vessel to ‘Dark Fleet’ Amid Arctic 2 Project Expansion

Russia Adds New Vessel To Dark Fleet Amid Arctic 2 LNG Ramp Up?

Russia has added another LNG tanker to its growing “dark fleet” (also known as the shadow fleet) as the U.S.-sanctioned Arctic LNG 2 project continues to ramp up exports despite Western restrictions. The 19-year-old vessel, now operating as Arctic Express, loaded a cargo of liquefied natural gas from a floating storage unit linked to the project near Murmansk on June 28.

The New Addition: Arctic Express The tanker, previously named Queen Cassiopeia and flagged in Sierra Leone while managed by a Greek firm, was transferred in mid-May to St. Petersburg-based SMP Techmanagement LLC and re-flagged to Russia. It is one of at least two new LNG carriers recently added to Russia’s registry (the other being Avacha, formerly T Handan under Panama flag).

This brings the number of vessels suspected of ferrying sanctioned Russian LNG to at least 21, according to shipping data and industry tracking.

Arctic LNG 2: Record Output Despite Sanctions

The Arctic LNG 2 project, operated by Novatek and heavily targeted by U.S. sanctions, has significantly increased production and shipments. In May 2026, it exported a record over 400,000 metric tons of LNG. Over the past year (since deliveries began in August 2024), more than 40 cargoes totaling around 2.6 million metric tons have been shipped, with China remaining the primary buyer.

Russia is actively building capacity to circumvent the EU’s ban on Russian LNG imports under short-term contracts (already in effect) and the upcoming ban on long-term contracts effective January 1, 2027. The specialized nature of LNG shipping—requiring compatible terminals, precise tracking, and ice-class vessels for Arctic routes—makes concealment harder than for crude oil, where ship-to-ship transfers at sea are common.

Russia’s Dark Fleet in Context

Russia operates the world’s largest shadow fleet of tankers to evade sanctions on oil and gas exports. Estimates of Russia’s shadow/dark fleet size vary by definition and source but generally range from 1,000 to over 1,400 vessels:

Ukrainian government catalog: 1,337 ships (February 2026) and 1,404 marine vessels (May 2026).

Other analyses (BRS, S&P Global, KSE): Roughly 978–1,140+ shadow oil tankers in 2025, with broader estimates reaching 1,100–1,600 vessels by late 2023–2025.

The broader global “dark fleet” (primarily serving Russia, Iran, and Venezuela) totals approximately 1,400–1,500 active vessels according to trackers like TankerTrackers.com (1,499 active vessels) and Ukrainian sources.

Iran and Venezuela: Smaller but Active Components

Iran: Maintains a significant but smaller shadow fleet focused on crude, condensate, and products. Exact totals are less precisely tracked publicly than Russia’s, but dozens to low hundreds of tankers operate in its network, often integrated with broader dark fleet logistics. Utilization has been high at times, though recent U.S. enforcement actions (including blockades) have disrupted flows.

Venezuela: Operates the smallest dedicated shadow component, estimated at 50–80 vessels in various analyses. Many have faced intensified U.S. seizures under operations like “Southern Spear,” prompting some reflagging toward Russia.

Russia’s fleet dominates the overall dark fleet ecosystem, accounting for the large majority of vessels and volumes.

LNG-Specific Shadow Fleet: A Smaller but Growing Niche

Unlike the massive oil tanker shadow fleet, Russia’s LNG dark fleet remains relatively small due to the technical requirements of LNG carriers. Recent tracking by Windward and industry reports estimates Russia’s LNG shadow fleet at around 21–23 vessels as of mid-2026.

This includes older second-hand acquisitions (such as the newly added Arctic Express, Merkuriy, Luch, Orion, and Kosmos) alongside some newbuilds delivered to Russian entities.

Original Article: Russia Adds New Vessel To Dark Fleet Amid Arctic 2 LNG Ramp Up? – Energy News Beat — Energynewsbeat