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Greece blocks EU's 21st Russia sanctions package to protect Greek Arctic LNG shipping

Athens demanded an exemption from a proposed ban on transporting Russian LNG to third countries, to protect Dynagas, a Greek shipping company whose Arctic tankers would become stranded assets; other EU member states called the veto 'shameless.'

能源·贸易· pending-decision 谁的钱·他们没说的 ·5 视角 · ·rbtfl 更新 2026年7月17日
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报道分歧

同一条新闻,各国新闻编辑室如何讲述。引文均注明出处并链接原文。

Belgium

Euronews

“Greece has thrown a spanner into the works of fresh EU sanctions by demanding an exemption to a full ban on Russian LNG; member states are 'aghast,' one diplomat calling it 'shameless.'”

Brussels-based pan-European broadcaster; reported the "shameless" diplomat reaction and the specific framing of Greece as a "major roadblock" to EU consensus on Russia sanctions阅读原文 ↗

Global

gCaptain

“Greece has thrown the EU's proposed 21st sanctions package against Russia into limbo, demanding exemptions for a domestic shipping company whose Arctic LNG carriers could become stranded assets.”

Global maritime-industry publication; detailed the Dynagas angle and the technical risk of Arctic LNG carriers becoming stranded assets under the proposed ban阅读原文 ↗

Greece

Athens Times

“Greece opposes new EU sanctions on Russian LNG to protect Dynagas, George Prokopiou's shipping firm, delaying the 21st sanctions package.”

Greek English-language outlet; identified the beneficial owner of Dynagas (George Prokopiou) and framed the veto as protecting a single shipping billionaire's fleet阅读原文 ↗

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Summary

Greece has blocked the European Union's proposed 21st package of Russia sanctions, demanding an exemption from a provision banning EU-flagged or EU-owned vessels from transporting Russian LNG to third countries. The objection protects Dynagas, a Greek shipping company owned by billionaire George Prokopiou, whose specialized Arctic LNG carriers would become stranded assets under the ban. Other EU member states were described as "aghast," with one diplomat calling Athens' demand "shameless." The 21st package, which also targets Russian oil-price-cap enforcement, was left adrift pending Greek agreement.

The split

Euronews framed Greece as a "major roadblock" invoking national commercial interest over collective EU pressure on Russia, while gCaptain reported the issue in purely technical shipping-industry terms. The Athens Times identified the specific Prokopiou ownership angle, which no EU institution or Greek official acknowledged publicly.

By the numbers

  • 21st, the number of the EU sanctions package currently blocked
  • 1 company, Dynagas, at the center of Greece's objection
  • Arctic LNG carriers would become stranded assets under the proposed transshipment ban

Why it matters

Greece's veto illustrates the limits of EU solidarity when sanctions intersect with domestic commercial interests. Dynagas operates a niche fleet that is commercially viable only if it can continue transporting Russian Arctic LNG to buyers in Asia and elsewhere. Any exemption carve-out Greece extracts could set a precedent for other member-state opt-outs on Russia sanctions.

What to watch

  • Whether the EU Council finds a compromise text that satisfies Greece without gutting the LNG transshipment ban
  • Whether Dynagas discloses contingency plans if the ban eventually passes
  • Reaction from Baltic and Nordic EU states, which have pushed hardest for tighter energy sanctions on Russia

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