August 11

Second LNG Tanker Seen Docking at Sanctioned Russian Facility

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ENB Pub Note: We have been following the “Dark Fleet” for years, and many said that it would only be in the crude oil space. The growth of LNG demand over the last several years has increased the supply of waterfalled LNG tankers from original owners to sold to “Dark Fleet” use owners. Based on the number of new builds on order, we see this side of the LNG market growing exponentially. Data is difficult to get, but once we get the numbers we will release the trends and data. 

 

US sanctions had hindered shipments from Arctic LNG 2
First natural gas carrier arrived at plant earlier this month

A second liquefied natural gas tanker has docked at an export terminal in northern Russia that’s subject to US sanctions, satellite images show.

The ship’s appearance and length of about 290 meters (951 feet) matches the Asya Energy, according to satellite images from Planet Labs PBC. Its arrival follows the apparent export of the Arctic LNG 2 plant’s first cargo earlier this month on another ship that also concealed its true location and was owned by the same India-based company.

The Asya Energy is part of a suspected “dark fleet” of LNG vessels Moscow is setting up to carry gas to willing buyers, similar to a group of ships assembled to carry Russian oil. Traders are still closely tracking the Pioneer — the first tanker to dock at the Arctic facility, which had been struggling to start exports due to Western restrictions — as it heads toward Europe.

The US imposed sanctions in November to prevent the start of exports from Arctic LNG 2. While the facility began production in December, it was unable to begin shipping fuel as sanctions deterred foreign companies and stopped delivery of specialized, ice-ready carriers.

The Asya Energy LNG tanker’s transponder shows it in the Barents Sea (blue dot) while satellite images show it at Russia’s sanctioned Arctic 2 plant (red dot)Bloomberg
Asya Energy is managed by Ocean Speedstar Solutions, according to Equasis, a global shipping database. Ocean Speedstar didn’t respond to several requests for comment. Novatek PJSC, which leads the facility, hasn’t commented on the arrival of any vessel, and the images do not confirm LNG is being loaded.Source: Bloomberg

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