Sweden stops sanctioned tanker suspected in oil spill

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FRANKFURT, Germany — The Swedish Coast Guard said Friday it has boarded a tanker suspected of causing a 12-kilometre oil spill on the Baltic Sea, adding that the vessel is under European Union sanctions aimed at the “shadow fleet” transporting Russian oil.

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FRANKFURT, Germany — The Swedish Coast Guard said Friday it has boarded a tanker suspected of causing a 12-kilometre oil spill on the Baltic Sea, adding that the vessel is under European Union sanctions aimed at the “shadow fleet” transporting Russian oil.

The spill was detected early Thursday east of Gotland island, and investigators identified the Flora 1 as the suspected source. The coast guard boarded the vessel early Friday and took it and its 24-member crew to anchorage near Ysted in southern Sweden.

“We act when we detect emissions. This is a result of our enhanced maritime surveillance that we are conducting as a result of the deteriorating security situation in the Baltic Sea region,” Daniel Stenling, deputy chief of operations, said in a statement. There were no immediate details on what caused the spill.

It was unclear under what country’s flag the vessel was travelling and its destination was unclear, the Coast Guard said. It departed the Russian port of Primorsk, where a major Russian oil export terminal is located, on Tuesday, according to the MarineTraffic maritime data company.

The EU had sanctioned the vessel, meaning transactions involving it are forbidden, for carrying Russian oil while “practising irregular and high-risk shipping practices.” Unsafe practices can include turning off its automatic tracking system to hide where a vessel is going.

The shadow fleet emerged in response to a price cap on Russian oil imposed by the Group of Seven democracies to limit the revenues that fund Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The cap was enforced by barring insurance and shipping companies from handling oil above the cap.

The fleet is made up of aging tankers with ownership and insurance based in countries that are not observing the price cap. The age of the vessels and their lack of Western insurance has raised safety concerns about oil spills and who would get the cleanup bill.

“The Russian shadow fleet, which consists of older, inadequately insured tankers that circumvent sanctions, poses a significant security and environmental threat,” Swedish Civil Defence Minister Carl-Oskar Bohlin said on X.

“The government views the incident with grave concern, even though this time it is not a matter of a large-scale oil spill.”

He said the Coast Guard sees no imminent risk of the oil reaching land and can take measures for oil cleanup if necessary. Up to 18 cubic metres, or 113 barrels of oil, was released, he said.

The Ukrainian government says the vessel is owned by a Hong Kong company and has been affiliated with an Indian company that is “one of the leading operators of the so-called ‘shadow’ fleet involved in the transportation of Russian crude oil.”

A Ukrainian government website on sanctions said the Flora 1 carried the flag of Sierra Leone but had falsely used Benin as its flag country, and in the past had been detected carrying out a ship-to-ship oil transfer near Greece — one way of obscuring where oil comes from — and turning off its vessel location system.

» The Associated Press

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