Jessica Parker,Berlin correspondent, Baltic Sea and
Ned Davies,BBC Confirm
Getty PicturesOut on the western Baltic, a coastguard officer radios a close-by, sanctioned oil tanker.
“Swedish Coastguard calling… Do you consent to reply just a few questions for us? Over.”
By heavy static, barely audible solutions crackle over from a crew member, who step by step lists the ship’s insurance coverage particulars, flag state and final port of name – Suez, Egypt.
“I feel this ship will go as much as Russia and get oil,” says Swedish investigator, Jonatan Tholin.
That is the entrance line of Europe’s uneasy standoff with Russia’s so-called “shadow fleet”; a time period that generally refers to a whole bunch of tankers used to bypass a value cap on Russian oil exports.
After the Kremlin launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, many Western nations imposed sanctions on Russian power, which Moscow is accused of dodging by delivery oil on aged tankers typically with obscure possession or insurance coverage.

Some “shadow” ships are even suspected of undersea sabotage, illicit drone launches or “spoofing” their location knowledge.
Out on the waves, the place freedom of navigation is a golden rule, the flexibility and urge for food of coastal nations to intervene is restricted, though the danger they face is escalating.
Because the BBC has discovered, a rising community of “shadow” ships are crusing with no legitimate nationwide flag, which might render vessels stateless and with out correct insurance coverage.
That could be a troubling development, given many are virtually “floating rust buckets”, says senior maritime intelligence analyst at Windward AI, Michelle Wiese Bockmann. If there may be an accident, like a billion-dollar oil spill, “good luck with looking for any individual accountable to select up any value”.
Pushed by file sanctions and tighter enforcement, the variety of falsely flagged ships globally has greater than doubled this 12 months to over 450, most of them tankers, in line with the Worldwide Maritime Group (IMO) database.
The BBC has been monitoring one ship that seems to have sailed with no legitimate flag.

The pinnacle of Estonia’s navy, Commodore Ivo Värk, says they’ve seen dozens of such passing vessels this 12 months whereas they used to see only one or two.
The rise is alarming, he tells me, as we discuss in his workplace overlooking the Gulf of Finland, a slender gateway to the foremost Russian oil terminals of Ust-Luga and Primorsk.
What’s extra, he suggests, it is brazen: “There isn’t any secret made about it.”
We spot the tanker Unity on the MarineTraffic app, the day we board an Estonian (British-built) Minehunter that can also be utilized in Nato’s Baltic Sentry patrols to guard essential infrastructure.
Journeying east, Unity is over 100 miles away however crusing in our route.
The BBC has investigated its historical past and it gives an illuminating perception into the enigmatic lifetime of a shadow ship.
Monitoring knowledge exhibits that Unity has handed by means of the English Channel 4 occasions within the final twelve months, together with journeys between Russian ports and India; a key oil buyer that has not signed as much as the worth cap.
Initially generally known as Ocean Explorer, the tanker was inbuilt 2009 and flew the flag of Singapore for greater than a decade.
Again in 2019, it was named in a UN report for alleged involvement in a ship-to-ship switch with a vessel that had been sanctioned for its function in transporting gas to North Korea – which is among other countries also charged with utilising elusive shadow ships.
By late 2021, the vessel – which that 12 months operated underneath the title Ocean Vela – took the flag of the Marshall Islands however was struck from that record in 2024, a registry spokesperson informed us, as a result of the ship’s then-operator and useful proudly owning firm had been sanctioned by the UK.
The tanker seems to have had three additional names since 2021 (Beks Swan, March and Unity) and three additional flags (Panama, Russia and Gambia) however at all times retains a novel IMO quantity.
In August, ship broadcasting knowledge exhibits Unity claimed the flag of Lesotho which was designated as “false”. Lesotho is a small, landlocked African enclave kingdom that, in line with the IMO, doesn’t have an official registry.
The BBC has tried to contact Unity’s listed proprietor, a Dubai-registered firm referred to as FMTC Ship Charter LLC, however our emails and our calls went unanswered.
The useful homeowners of 60% of shadow fleet vessels stay primarily unknown, in line with maritime intelligence firm Windward AI.
Opaque possession buildings – and frequent title or flag adjustments – have grow to be a signature trait of the shadow fleet as a method of avoiding detection.
Purged from respected registries and having circled the drain of poor-quality alternate options, some ships are actually at a degree “the place they simply do not even hassle in any respect”, says Michelle Wiese Bockmann.
Unity’s most up-to-date journey noticed it sail by means of the North Sea in late October earlier than getting into the Baltic and passing nations together with Sweden and Estonia – the purpose at which we noticed it.
By 6 November, it was anchored outdoors the Russian port of Ust-Luga the place it stays on the time of publication.
The tanker was added to the UK and EU’s ever-growing record of sanctioned vessels earlier this 12 months however, like so many others, continues to do enterprise regardless of different difficulties.
Again in January, it reportedly sheltered within the English Channel after struggling a mechanical failure throughout a storm. The next August it was reportedly detained at a Russian port because of technical points and unpaid wages.
Planet LabsUnity is only one of a whole bunch of vessels topic to UK and EU service and port bans as each London and Brussels attempt to improve strain on the Kremlin.
However, Russian revenues from crude and oil product gross sales had been $13.1bn (£9.95bn) in October alone, in line with the Paris-based Worldwide Power Company (IEA) – though this was down by $2.3bn when put next with the identical month a 12 months in the past.
Evaluation by the Centre for Analysis on Power and Clear Air finds that “shadow” tankers, both sanctioned or suspected, account for 62% of shipped Russian crude oil exports, whereas China and India are by far the most important clients for crude, adopted by Turkey and the European Union itself.
Whereas politicians talk of toughening action, navy and coastguard officers level out {that a} nation’s energy to behave fades the additional you exit to sea.
The suitable of harmless passage stays a cornerstone of maritime legislation, however stateless vessels technically should not entitled to it.
International locations akin to France, Finland and Estonia have detained ships, and so they can accomplish that the place a criminal offense is suspected, nonetheless such drastic controls stay a comparatively uncommon occasion.
“There is a complexity related to it,” argues Commodore Ivo Värk. “With the Russian presence subsequent to our borders, the danger of escalation is simply too excessive to do it regularly.”
Frans SanderseThe Estonians converse from expertise.
After they tried to intercept a flagless tanker in Could, Russia briefly deployed a fighter jet and has “continually” had about two naval vessels within the Gulf of Finland since, says Commodore Värk.
The concern of escalation sits alongside broader issues of business retaliation if a extra aggressive strategy had been to be taken.
“Day by day within the Baltic, there’s suspicious exercise,” a Nato official informed the BBC, talking on the situation of anonymity. However, the official added, “we do not wish to be cowboys and leaping on ships. The act of monitoring ships is a deterrent in itself”.
“Freedom of navigation is the lifeblood of all of our economies.”
Again on the bridge of the Swedish coastguard ship, the radio name with the sanctioned tanker has wrapped up.
“Thanks to your co-operation,” says the officer because the vessel carries on in direction of Russia.
The trade lasted simply over 5 minutes.
“It is advisable to see it in a bigger perspective,” says investigator Jonatan Tholin after I recommend these measures seem lower than muscular: “This data can be utilized in our maritime surveillance.”
However as Europe steps up checks and watches the waves, Windward’s Michelle Wiese Bockmann spies one thing else: “You’ll be able to actually see the worldwide rules-based order crumbling by means of the sanctions-circumventing techniques of those vessels.”
There’s a lot at stake for the surroundings and on safety, she says, and in the meantime “the darkish fleet is getting darker”.
The BBC approached Russia’s embassy in London for remark. In response, a spokesman stated that the West’s “anti-Russian sanctions” had been “illegitimate” and “undermine established ideas of worldwide commerce”.
“Labelling ships used to export Russian oil as ‘shadow fleet’ is discriminatory and deceptive,” the embassy stated, and situations of invalid flags had been sometimes all the way down to “simply resolved” points akin to administrative delays.
It was sanctioning nations, the spokesperson stated, that had “heightened” the dangers by “forcing shipowners and operators to navigate an more and more fragmented and restrictive regulatory panorama”.
Further reporting by Adrienne Murray, Michael Steininger and Ali Zaidi


