Fifth sanctioned Russian LNG carrier docks at Beihai terminal in China

The Iris carrier, part of the Arctic LNG 2 project, docked at China’s Beihai terminal despite US and EU sanctions, signalling intensifying gas flows between Russia and China.

Share:

Comprehensive energy news coverage, updated nonstop

Annual subscription

8.25€/month*

*billed annually at 99€/year for the first year then 149,00€/year ​

Unlimited access • Archives included • Professional invoice

OTHER ACCESS OPTIONS

Monthly subscription

Unlimited access • Archives included

5.2€/month*
then 14.90€ per month thereafter

FREE ACCOUNT

3 articles offered per month

FREE

*Prices are excluding VAT, which may vary depending on your location or professional status

Since 2021: 35,000 articles • 150+ analyses per week

A fifth liquefied natural gas (LNG) carrier linked to Russia’s Arctic LNG 2 project has docked at the Tieshan terminal in the southern Chinese port of Beihai. The vessel, named Iris and formerly known as North Sky, berthed with a draft of 11.7 metres, according to Commodities at Sea (CAS) data. Its arrival came just two days after the departure of the Buran, the fourth sanctioned LNG carrier to use the facility.

The Buran, formerly called North Air, left the terminal with a reported draft of 9.8 metres, down from 11.6 metres at arrival. Since the commissioning of the second liquefaction train at Arctic LNG 2 in June, shipments to Asia have resumed, with the Iris calling at the loading site on June 26.

Sixth vessel inbound

A sixth Russian LNG carrier, the Arctic Vostok — formerly East Energy — is en route to Beihai, after being tracked southwest of Hainan Island on September 12. This vessel, also sanctioned by the European Union in February following US measures in August 2024, highlights the strategic significance of the maritime corridor linking Russia and China for gas exports.

Market sources indicated Arctic LNG 2 cargoes have traded between $8 and $8.50 per million British thermal units (MMBtu), though these figures remain unconfirmed. Trucked LNG prices in Beihai have remained stable at around CNY3,900 per metric tonne ($10.4/MMBtu), while prices in neighbouring Guangdong Province are approximately CNY4,100/mt amid subdued downstream demand.

Strategic infrastructure and limited capacity

Located in China’s Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, the Beihai LNG terminal has an annual receiving capacity of 6 million tonnes. It includes a dedicated berth for vessels ranging from 80,000 to 266,000 cubic metres and four LNG tanks of 160,000 cubic metres each. The terminal is operated by the China Oil and Gas Pipeline Network Group (PipeChina), a national energy infrastructure operator.

PipeChina is jointly owned by several state-owned enterprises, including PetroChina (29.9%), Sinopec (14%) and China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC) with a 2.9% stake. In a report issued on August 15, PipeChina excluded the Beihai terminal from its list of facilities with available third-party LNG import capacity between September and December 2025, suggesting the terminal is fully booked during this period.

Network of international stakeholders

The Arctic LNG 2 project is 60% owned by Russian producer Novatek, with TotalEnergies (France), China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC), CNOOC and Japan Arctic LNG each holding 10% stakes. The latter is a Dutch entity 75% controlled by the Japan Organization for Metals and Energy Security and 25% by Mitsui.

The La Perouse carrier, also sanctioned by the United Kingdom since September 2024, was the first among the recently loaded ships to sail westward via the Northern Sea Route. It was located south of Congo on the morning of September 16, according to CAS, indicating growing diversity in shipment routes despite international restrictions.

By selling its US subsidiary TVL LLC, active in the Haynesville and Cotton Valley formations in Louisiana, to Grayrock Energy for $255mn, Tokyo Gas pursues a targeted rotation of its upstream assets while strengthening, through TG Natural Resources, its exposure to major US gas hubs supporting its LNG value chain.
TotalEnergies acquires 50% of a flexible power generation portfolio from EPH, reinforcing its gas-to-power strategy in Europe through a €10.6bn joint venture.
The Essington-1 well identified significant hydrocarbon columns in the Otway Basin, strengthening investment prospects for the partners in the drilling programme.
New Delhi secures 2.2 million tonnes of liquefied petroleum gas annually from the United States, a state-funded commitment amid American sanctions and shifting supply strategies.
INNIO and Clarke Energy are building a 450 MW gas engine power plant in Thurrock to stabilise the electricity grid in southeast England and supply nearly one million households.
Aramco and Yokogawa have completed the deployment of autonomous artificial intelligence agents in the gas processing unit of Fadhili, reducing energy and chemical consumption while limiting human intervention.
S‑Fuelcell is accelerating the launch of its GFOS platform to provide autonomous power to AI data centres facing grid saturation and a continuous rise in energy demand.
Aramco is reportedly in talks with Commonwealth LNG and Louisiana LNG, according to Reuters, to secure up to 10 mtpa in the “2029 wave” as North America becomes central to global liquefaction growth.
Kyiv signs a gas import deal with Greece and mobilises nearly €2bn to offset production losses caused by Russian strikes, reinforcing a strategic energy partnership ahead of winter.
Blackstone commits $1.2bn to develop Wolf Summit, a 600 MW combined-cycle natural gas plant, marking a first for West Virginia and addressing rising electricity demand across the Mid-Atlantic corridor.
UAE-based ADNOC Gas reports its highest-ever quarterly net income, driven by domestic sales growth and a new quarterly dividend policy valued at $896 million.
Caprock Midstream II invests in more than 90 miles of gas pipelines in Texas and strengthens its leadership with the arrival of Steve Jones, supporting its expansion in the dry gas sector.
Harvest Midstream has completed the acquisition of the Kenai liquefied natural gas terminal, a strategic move to repurpose existing infrastructure and support energy reliability in Southcentral Alaska.
Dana Gas signed a memorandum of understanding with the Syrian Petroleum Company to assess the revival of gas fields, leveraging a legal window opened by temporary sanction easings from European, British and US authorities.
With the commissioning of the Badr-15 well, Egypt reaffirms its commitment to energy security through public investment in gas exploration, amid declining output from its mature fields.
US-based Venture Global has signed a long-term liquefied natural gas (LNG) export agreement with Japan’s Mitsui, covering 1 MTPA over twenty years starting in 2029.
Natural Gas Services Group reported a strong third quarter, supported by fleet expansion and rising demand, leading to an upward revision of its full-year earnings outlook.
The visit of Kazakh President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev to Moscow confirms Russia's intention to consolidate its regional energy alliances, particularly in gas, amid a tense geopolitical and economic environment.
CSV Midstream Solutions launched operations at its Albright facility in the Montney, marking a key milestone in the deployment of Canadian sour gas treatment and sulphur recovery capacity.
Glenfarne has selected Baker Hughes to supply critical equipment for the Alaska LNG project, including a strategic investment, reinforcing the progress of one of the largest gas infrastructure initiatives in the United States.

All the latest energy news, all the time

Annual subscription

8.25€/month*

*billed annually at 99€/year for the first year then 149,00€/year ​

Unlimited access - Archives included - Pro invoice

Monthly subscription

Unlimited access • Archives included

5.2€/month*
then 14.90€ per month thereafter

*Prices shown are exclusive of VAT, which may vary according to your location or professional status.

Since 2021: 30,000 articles - +150 analyses/week.