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Data shows that another tanker has left the Portovaya LNG plant sanctioned by Russia.

LSEG data revealed on Wednesday that a second gas carrier had left the U.S. sanctioned Portovaya LNG Plant in Russia on the Baltic Sea, after a long hiatus. The ship was looking for a foreign buyer. This shows Russia's ongoing efforts to circumvent restrictions on LNG sales.

The ship tracking data showed that the gas carrier Valera (formerly Velikiy Novgorod) had left the Gulf of Finland. The data indicated that it was expected to arrive in an unspecified place on January 15.

This is the second tanker to leave the factory in the last three months.

Perle (formerly Pskov) was the first tanker to leave Portovaya, in mid-July. On Wednesday, it was heading north-west through the Strait of Malacca. The tanker has discharged LNG in an unknown location.

In September 2022, the small-scale Portovaya LNG facility, with a production capability of 1.5 million tonnes of LNG annually, will begin operations. The exports were suspended in February of this year due to the U.S. sanction.

During the initial stages of operation, Portovaya's cargoes were mainly delivered to Turkey and Greece. The supply markets were then expanded to include China, Spain and Italy.

In September, Russia shipped a first cargo from its Arctic LNG 2 plant to China, also under U.S. Sanctions, revitalizing the project. The plant started production in December 2023, but was unable to market the frozen gas because of the restrictions.

Russia's so-called "shadow fleet" is a collection of aging vessels owned by opaque parties that it uses to circumvent the sanctions imposed on its oil.

Shadow fleet tankers often turn off their automatic identification system (AIS), which signals their location. Or they manipulate it in order to send false tracking data. This tactic is commonly used by crews who want to camouflage their activities. It's called spoofing. (Reporting and Editing by Aidan Lewis).

(source: Reuters)