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Russia adds four LNG tanks to its fleet ahead of Europe's import ban

LSEG ship tracking data and the Russian'ship register' showed on Wednesday that Russia added four liquefied gas carriers to its fleet. This could help increase the country?s?marketshare ahead of a ban by the EU on Russian gas imports. In January, the European Union gave final approval to an import ban on Russian natural gas by 2027. In response to Russia's "war on Ukraine", the bloc also imposed sanctions. The sanctions have restricted Russia's ability to access the vessels that it needs to increase its share of the global market for LNG. The Russian Register?on?Wednesday showed four LNG tanks: the Orion, the Luch, Mercury and Cagri LNG. The vessels were all built between 2005 and 2006.

The Equasis vessel data system showed that in February of this year, the owners of the tankers had changed.

The Kosmos, Luch, and Mercury were transferred to Mighty Ocean Shipping Ltd., registered in Hong Kong. Celtic Maritime & Trading SA., registered Turkey, now owns the Orion and Mercury.

All vessels have been renamed and re-flagged in Russia. The tankers used to be?owned? by an Omani company.

LSEG data indicated that all four oil tankers were headed north in the Atlantic Ocean.

The LNG carrier Luch's destination is Murmansk. This is near the Saam LNG floating Storage Unit.

The facility is used to?transship LNG from the Arctic LNG-2 project. Near the port, ship-to-ship LNG transshipment operations for the Yamal LNG Project are being carried out. The cargoes are transferred from ice class tankers to conventional gas carrier. Barbara Lewis, Barbara Lewis (Reporting)

(source: Reuters)