Commodities

Fake Coordinates and Tanker Tricks Expose Shadowy Russian Oil Trade

Two aging tankers duped tracking systems as part of the murky trade in sanctioned fuel

The Turba, left, and Simba tankers in the Laconian Gulf, Greece, on Sept. 19.

Photographer: Laurent Laughlin/Bloomberg

Lock
This article is for subscribers only.

On a sunny day off the southern coast of Greece last week, two aging tankers nestled next to each other while one pumped oil to the other. As far as global satellite tracking systems could tell, it never happened.

The deviation between real and electronic locations — measured in this case at over four miles — wasn’t a glitch, but a deliberate deception that’s part of a sophisticated system to keep sanctioned Russian fuel flowing, often at prices that are higher than western powers would like.