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Arctic Shipping Slows as Sanctions Constrain Russia's Northern Sea Route Ambitions
By MGN Editorial•February 11, 2026 at 08:58 PM
Cargo volumes along Russia's Northern Sea Route fell in 2025 as Western sanctions increasingly limit Moscow's plans to transform the Arctic passage into a global energy export corridor.
Cargo volumes along Russia's Northern Sea Route fell in 2025, underscoring how Western sanctions are increasingly curtailing Moscow's long-held ambitions to transform the Arctic passage into a global energy export corridor, according to a report from gCaptain.
The decline in Northern Sea Route traffic highlights the mounting challenges facing Russia's efforts to develop the Arctic as a major shipping route. Western sanctions imposed over the Kremlin's invasion of Ukraine have restricted Russia's access to critical technology and financing needed to modernize port infrastructure and expand its icebreaker fleet along the route.
'The sanctions have really put the brakes on Russia's Arctic shipping ambitions,' said Sam Chambers, a maritime industry analyst. 'With limited ability to upgrade key assets, Russia is struggling to keep the Northern Sea Route commercially viable, especially as energy exports to Europe have dried up.'
In a separate development, the state-owned Abu Dhabi National Oil Co. (Adnoc) announced plans to order up to six new liquefied natural gas (LNG) tankers as part of efforts to boost its global gas trading business, according to The Maritime Executive. The move underscores the United Arab Emirates' ambitions to become a major player in the international LNG market.
'Adnoc is making a strategic bet that global gas demand will remain strong in the coming decades, and they want to have the shipping capacity to capitalize on that,' Chambers said. 'It's part of the company's broader push to diversify its energy business beyond just crude oil exports.'
#northern sea route#arctic shipping#russia#sanctions#lng#adnoc#uae
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