Site icon Energy News Beat

Novatek Set to Dock Second LNG Unit at Sanctioned Arctic Plant

Novatek

Wellhead equipment at the Utrenneye field, the resource base for Novatek's Arctic LNG 2 project.Photographer: Natalia Kolesnikova/AFP/Getty Images

Russian gas producer Novatek PJSC seems to be pushing ahead with an expansion project at its Arctic LNG 2 plant despite Western energy sanctions.

A small fleet of tug vessels towing a second production train has approached the site of the plant on Saturday, according to ship-tracking data. The platform left the construction site near Murmansk on July 25, taking a three-week journey across the eastern Arctic to arrive to the productions area, where the first train is already operating, the ship-tracking data shows.

Arctic LNG 2 is a key pillar of Russia’s strategy to expand in liquefied natural gas, a growing global market that could help Moscow offset lower piped-gas flows following its invasion of Ukraine. The US slapped sanctions on the facility last year, aiming to cut the energy revenues fueling the Kremlin’s war machine.

Tug ships tow the Arctic LNG 2 platform across the Gulf of Ob in the direction of the plant site on Aug. 16Copernicus Data Space Ecosystem

The restrictions prevented delivery of the ice-class tankers needed to export the LNG, delaying shipments by months. But satellite images show two vessels recently left the plant, suggesting Russia has managed to circumvent the curbs using a shadow fleet.

The second platform seems identical to the first one, with a length of around 330 meters (1,083 feet) and a width of around 150 meters, according to satellite images from Copernicus Data Space Ecosystem. The first train, delivered to the production site a year ago, had a weight of some 640 thousand tons and was the heaviest object ever moved in the history of the global LNG industry, according to Novatek.

Exit mobile version