May 8, 2024
ATHENS, May
8 (Reuters) – The Greek navy on Wednesday extended an
advisory effectively banning ship traffic off the coast of the southeastern
Peloponnese that two sources said was aimed at deterring ship-to-ship transfers
of Russian oil off Greece.
Greece, in
a rare move, over the past weeks has issued two NAVTEX notices for military
exercises in the Laconian Gulf area, urging merchant and other vessels to avoid
the area. One of them was issued on May 1.
“It was
initially expiring on May 9 but was extended today,” said a defence ministry
official who declined to be named.
Following
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, international sanctions have made trading Russian
crude and oil products increasingly difficult, prompting traders to seek
loopholes to export them, including offshore ship-to-ship
transfers.
In recent
months, waters around Greece’s southern coast and the Laconian Gulf have been
meeting oil transfer points especially for tankers carrying Russian oil onto
other vessels.
Vessels are
positioned beyond the limit of six nautical miles from the shore to avoid cargo
and vessel checks by Greek authorities.
“You cannot
perform an inspection on a ship with a foreign flag in international waters.
Unless a vessel carries a Greek flag your hands are tied,” said a second source
with knowledge of the matter.
“The NAVTEX
advisory is an indirect way to prevent such activities.”
A third
government official said that Athens plans to extend maritime advisories for
military exercises in that area which could eventually push away STS transfers
close to Greek waters.
In April,
Reuters reported that four tankers were stuck near the Laconian Gulf
after the United States hit the vessels with Iran-related sanctions.
Russia has
been grappling with the loss of insurance and other shipping services
as Western countries turn the screws on Moscow with financial sanctions.
The
European Commission is expected to propose sanctions on oil tankers in the
so-called “shadow fleet”that transports Russian oil outside the Group of
Seven countries (G7) oil price cap limit, European Union sources told Reuters
last month.
(Reporting
by Renee Maltezou in Athens and Jonathan Saul in London; Additional by
reporting Yannis Souliotis; Editing by Jason Neely and Angus MacSwan)
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