The interception marks a significant escalation in enforcement of Western sanctions aimed at cutting revenue that sustains Moscow’s war effort.
The Grinch, built in 2004, registered under a false Comoros flag and on sanctions lists of the United States, European Union, United Kingdom and other Western governments, had loaded its Arctic crude cargo at Murmansk on Dec. 26, according to maritime tracking data.
It then travelled down the Norwegian coastline and entered the Mediterranean via the Strait of Gibraltar on Wednesday night before being intercepted.
The Murmansk port area in northwest Russia serves as a central export hub for crude from the nation’s Arctic oil projects. Supplies from fields including the offshore Prirazlomnoye platform in the Pechora Sea, Varandey in the Timan-Pechora region and Novy Port on the Yamal Peninsula are often collected near Murmansk for onward shipment to global markets.
Those Arctic grades, including lighter blends such as Novy Port crude, have been increasingly targeted by sanctions intended to cut Russia’s oil revenue.
France’s navy, with intelligence support from the United Kingdom and other allies, boarded the 22-year-old, 249-meter crude oil tanker on the high seas in an operation conducted under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, Macron said in a social media post.
“We will not tolerate any violation,” Macron wrote, adding that activities by sanctioned vessels help finance Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine.
The vessel has been linked to the so-called “shadow fleet” of tankers that Western nations say are used to circumvent sanctions by sailing under false flags, turning off tracking transponders or using opaque ownership structures to continue transporting Russian oil to markets including Asia.
French maritime authorities are escorting the Grinch to port in Marseille for inspection as a judicial investigation proceeds.
“This operation was carried out with the support of several of our allies,” Macron said, stressing both the legality of the action and France’s commitment to enforcing sanctions. “The activities of the shadow fleet contribute to financing [Russia’s] war of aggression against Ukraine,” he added.
The use of older tankers like the Grinch, often operating outside traditional Western maritime oversight, has frustrated efforts by Europe and the United States to choke off income from Russian oil exports since the invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
In previous cases, Western authorities have detained or challenged vessels suspected of sanctions violations, but experts say this appears to be the first instance where a tanker carrying crude explicitly loaded from the Russian Arctic has been stopped and diverted mid-voyage.
French officials declined to specify whether the cargo itself would be confiscated or what charges might be brought, but referred the case to prosecutors in Marseille, who handle maritime law matters.
The operation reflects an intensifying willingness among EU nations to enforce sanctions at sea, even as Russia adapts its shipping tactics and continues to find buyers for Arctic crude, often at discounted prices.
An LNG carrier central to Russia’s sanctioned Arctic gas trade was rocked by an explosion around 4 a.m. on March 3 roughly 150 nautical miles southeast of Malta, in an incident Moscow said was a Ukrainian attack and that could ripple through the Kremlin’s fragile LNG shadow fleet logistics network.
An LNG carrier identified as the Arctic Metagaz, part of Russia’s emerging shadow fleet transporting sanctioned liquefied natural gas, was reportedly on fire early Tuesday in the central Mediterranean off the coasts of Malta and Libya.
xSingapore has delivered one of the clearest warnings yet to maritime professionals about the consequences of misleading authorities after a serious onboard accident, sentencing the master of a gas tanker to 14 months in jail for covering up details surrounding a fatal tank-cleaning incident.
February 13, 2026
Total Views: 2468
Get The Industry’s Go-To News
Subscribe to gCaptain Daily and stay informed with the latest global maritime and offshore news
— just like 107,340 professionals
Secure Your Spot
on the gCaptain Crew
Stay informed with the latest maritime and offshore news, delivered daily straight to your inbox
— trusted by our 107,340 members
Your Gateway to the Maritime World!
Essential news coupled with the finest maritime content sourced from across the globe.