Russia has bolstered its fleet of sanctions-circumventing vessels with the addition of Arctic Express, a freshly registered LNG tanker that recently loaded cargo from a floating storage facility supporting the Arctic LNG 2 project. According to Reuters, the 19-year-old vessel, previously operating as Queen Cassiopeia under a Sierra Leone flag, was transferred to St. Petersburg-based SMP Techmanagement LLC in mid-May, representing the latest step in Moscow's strategy to maintain energy exports despite international sanctions.
The vessel's repurposing underscores Russia's continued efforts to sustain Arctic LNG 2 operations and distribute its gas output despite U.S. and allied sanctions targeting the project. The relabeling of aging tankers through shell companies and flag changes has become a hallmark of Russia's so-called dark fleet—vessels operating with minimal international oversight and limited transparency regarding ownership and operations.
The expansion of Russia's dark fleet comes as Arctic LNG 2 ramps up production levels, highlighting the broader challenge facing Western policymakers in enforcing energy sanctions. Security analysts and energy observers continue to monitor the deployment of these vessels as a barometer of Russia's success in circumventing restrictions designed to curtail revenues from its oil and gas sector.