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Stricken oil tankers show threats of Russia's aging 'shadow fleet'

Russian authorities sought to restrict the damage on Monday from oil spilled into the Kerch Strait by two ageing tankers that were damaged throughout a heavy weekend storm, highlighting the environmental and insurance risks of Russia's 'shadow fleet'.

One crew member was eliminated after the Volgoneft 212 split in half, with 12 rescued, while authorities said all 14 team aboard the Volgoneft 239, which ran aground 80 metres from the coast near the port of Taman, were likewise saved.

The more than 50-year-old ships were bring some 9,200 metric tons (62,000 barrels) of oil products in total, Russian news company TASS said, however just how much dripped is being identified.

Volgoneft 212 go back to 1969 and Volgoneft 239 was constructed in 1973, certificates seen showed.

The spill might turn into one of the largest ecological catastrophes to impact the region recently, although the scale of possible insurance claims was not instantly clear.

The shipping market has raised issue in current months over the dangers and possible for collisions positioned by numerous shadow tankers in open sea lanes, with little reward for these vessels to follow cleaner shipping standards.

Russia has actually increasingly utilized a shadow fleet, which deploys different techniques to bypass worldwide sanctions.

The Kerch Strait, which separates mainland Russia from the Moscow-annexed Crimea region, is a crucial route for exports of its grain and fuel products.

The Finland-registered Centre for Research Study on Energy and Clean Air (CREA) think-tank said 369 vessels exported Russian crude oil and oil products last month, of which 206 were shadow tankers, and 28% of these were at least twenty years old.

Before the weekend incidents, CREA said the cost of clean up and payment arising from an oil spill from tankers with unidentified insurance or no insurance provision might amount to more than $1 billion for the seaside nation's taxpayers.

Russia declines Western pressure to restrict its oil exports and in the past year the variety of tankers transferring freights that are not managed or guaranteed by Western service providers has grown.

The files showed the Volgoneft 212 was covered by insurance coverage from Russia's VSK, while the vessel's operator, Kama-Shipping, stated it was carrying 4,200 lots of fuel oil.

Russia's OOO Absolyut Strakhovaniye covered the insurance coverage for the Volgoneft 239, documents seen showed.

Neither instantly responded to ask for remark.

President Vladimir Putin on Sunday purchased the federal government to established a working group to deal with the rescue operation and mitigate the impact of the spill, Russian news agencies cited Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov as saying.

(source: Reuters)