France has fined a Russia-linked oil tanker several million euros after detaining it for violating EU sanctions, marking one of the clearest physical enforcement actions yet against Moscow’s shadow fleet.
The tanker, Grinch, was boarded in the Mediterranean last month after sailing from Murmansk in Russia’s Arctic. It was held for three weeks at Fos-sur-Mer before being cleared to leave French waters, according to French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot. The exact fine was not disclosed.
The vessel is part of the network of tankers used to transport Russian crude outside traditional Western insurance and compliance systems. Since the invasion of Ukraine, that fleet has expanded rapidly, allowing Russia to maintain export flows despite sanctions from the European Union, the United Kingdom and the United States.
More than 600 tankers have been sanctioned by those authorities, including over 570 blacklisted by the EU since mid-2024. Designations alone, however, do not remove barrels from the market. Boarding and detaining vessels introduces operational risk and financial cost.
France has taken similar action before. In September, authorities boarded the tanker Boracay off the Atlantic coast after it failed to provide proof of nationality and declined to comply with naval requests.
Russian crude continues to flow. In fact, China’s imports from Russia are on track for an all-time high of over 2 million barrels per day in February. India’s imports, however, are on the downswing. Each tanker detention adds time, legal exposure and cost to the logistics chain for Russian oil. Russia’s federal budget remains heavily dependent on oil revenue—it’s what is fueling its war in Ukraine—and the shadow fleet exists to keep that revenue insulated from Western pressure.
Seizures like this do not shut in production, but they do raise the friction.
By Julianne Geiger for Oilprice.com
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