EU not doing enough to stop Russian shadow fleet, European Parliament president says


European countries are continuing to fund Russia’s war in Ukraine by buying oil and gas, the president of the European Parliament has admitted.
Speaking to The World With Yalda Hakim on Sky News, Roberta Metsola described the situation as “unacceptable”.
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She also acknowledged the EU is not doing enough to stop Russia’s shadow fleet from transporting sanctioned oil through European waters.
“We still have to do more on the shadow fleet, with more vessels that need to be impounded,” she said.
Russia uses its shadow fleet to export large quantities of crude oil despite Western sanctions.
Ms Metsola said while the EU had hit Russia with 19 packages of sanctions, more were needed.
“For us, any possibility for Russia to continue to wage its war against Ukraine and against Europe as a whole, by using funds that could inadvertently or overtly come from the European Union, is unacceptable,” she added.
Ms Metsola said the EU placed sanctions to prevent Russian gas from being bought inside the EU or imported via other countries in cheaper or different forms, and is edging closer to banning oil to the same extent.
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Asked if there was a plan to seize vessels operating in Russia’s shadow fleet, Ms Metsola said: “We have seen a lot of work, jointly, on this shadow fleet. It’s not solved yet. There are a lot of vessels that continue to operate.”
She said ships had been identified quickly changing their flags, changing their registration from one jurisdiction to another “in an illegal manner” – but admitted “we need to be faster”.
“I think we are doing well, but we need to do better,” she said.
Sky News hunts Russia’s shadow fleet
Sky News tracked dozens of Russian tankers loaded with sanctioned oil sailing between Britain and France.
The vessels carrying Russian oil worth around $100m (£74.1m) cruised through the Channel in defiance of Western sanctions.
Tankers the Rigel, the Hyperion and the Kousai were followed from the Gulf of Finland, where they had been loaded with oil at Russian Baltic ports, as they passed the narrowest point of the Dover Straits.
These ships were part of a “shadow fleet” of up to 800 vessels that kept the oil revenues funding the war in Ukraine.
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