Germany Secures Drifting Tanker off Baltic Coast

Matthias Williams and Sarah Marsh
Friday, January 10, 2025

A tugboat has stopped a tanker carrying around 99,000 metric tons of oil from Russia from drifting out of control off Germany's Baltic Sea coast near the island of Ruegen, emergency services said on Friday.

The 274-metre (899-foot) Panama-flagged tanker, called Eventin, and travelling from Russia to Egypt, had been drifting slowly and unable to manoeuvre since earlier on Friday, Germany's Central Command for Maritime Emergencies said.

A tugboat was holding it in position and others were en route, CCME said, adding it was evaluating next steps. Evacuation of the 24-member crew was not necessary, it said.

"Russia endangers our European security not only with its illegal war of aggression against Ukraine but also through severed cables ... disinformation campaigns, GPS jammers, and, indeed, with decrepit oil tankers," Germany's Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock said in a statement.

"With the unscrupulous use of a fleet of rusting tankers, (Russian President Vladimir) Putin not only circumvents sanctions but also deliberately accepts the risk of halting tourism in the Baltic Sea region."

Moscow did not immediately reply to a request for comment.

Baerbock said the incident is an example of why Germany, with other countries, had called for new sanctions against Russia's fleet of oil tankers in recent months.

Categories: Oil Tanker Government & Regulations Government Update Maritime Casualties

Related Stories

Laura DiBella Designated as Chairman of FMC

Adm. Kevin E. Lunday to Assume Command of the U.S. Coast Guard

Singapore Opens Applications for Additional LNG Bunkering Licenses

Current News

ONE Posts $88M Loss - Newbuild Deliveries Pressure Rates; Fleet Continues to Grow

Teamwork Required to Thwart Illegal Wildlife Trade

Longer Sailing Distances Boost Bulker Demand

Laura DiBella Designated as Chairman of FMC

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News