Russia blames Ukrainian drones for attack on LNG ship in Mediterranean
- All 30 crew members of LNG ship reported safe
- Russia calls the incident an 'act of terrorism'
- Would be first attack on Russian gas carrier if confirmed
- Vessel was en route to Port Said in Egypt, Libya says
Russia's transport ministry on Wednesday accused Ukrainian naval drones of attacking a Russian liquefied natural gas carrier, the Arctic Metagaz, which caught fire in the Mediterranean a day earlier.
If confirmed, it would be the first time that Ukraine has attacked a Russian LNG carrier. The Security Service of Ukraine did not respond to a request for comment.
Ukraine has frequently targeted Russian oil refineries and other energy infrastructure in an attempt to deprive Russia's war machine of funding.
The incident adds to the uncertainty on the global markets, already rattled by war in Iran. Russia's transport ministry said all 30 crew members, who were Russian nationals, were safe.
"We qualify what happened as an act of international terrorism and maritime piracy, a gross violation of the fundamental norms of international maritime law," the ministry said in a statement.
It said the vessel, which had been carrying a cargo from the Russian Arctic port of Murmansk, was attacked near international waters belonging to Malta and thanked Maltese rescue services.
Ukrainian naval drones had launched their attack from the coast of Libya, the ministry said.
Libya's National Oil Corporation said it had no involvement with the LNG carrier, adding that it was on a journey from Murmansk in Russia towards Port Said in Egypt.
The vessel's Russia-based manager LLC SMP Techmanagement and Russia's largest LNG producer Novatek have not yet commented on the incident.
Related News
Related News
- RWE strengthens partnerships with ADNOC and Masdar to enhance energy security in Germany and Europe
- TotalEnergies and Mozambique announce the full restart of the $20-B Mozambique LNG project
- Venture Global wins LNG arbitration case brought by Spain's Repsol
- KBR awarded FEED for Coastal Bend LNG project
- Norway pipeline gas export down 2.3% in 2025, seen steady this year

Comments