The Ust Luga — loaded with Russian jet fuel worth $116 million — was on its way to Slagentangen port, about 53 miles south of the capital Oslo, when activists chained themselves to its anchor, Aud Hegli Nordø, a spokesperson for Greenpeace Nordic, told CNN.
In a bid to block the tanker from docking, seven Greenpeace activists set off in boats across the Oslo Fjord waters and chained themselves to the anchor, said Nordø.
All were taken into police custody, in addition to several activists from climate action group Extinction Rebellion who joined the blockade, a spokesperson for Greenpeace confirmed to CNN. The ER activists were later released.
The Ust Luga is now docked in Slagen, according to tracking site Marine Traffic.
“The fact that our government still allows the import of Russian fossil fuels in the current situation is unfathomable”, Frode Pleym, head of Greenpeace Norway, said in a statement to CNN.
“I am shocked that Norway operates as a free port for Russian oil, which we know finances [Russian President Vladimir] Putin’s warfare”.
The Ust Luga tanker is registered in Hong Kong, according to Marine Traffic.
A spokesperson for ExxonMobil told CNN in a statement that deliveries of Russian fuel to Norway “are fulfilling contracts that were in place prior to the invasion.”
“We have not made any new purchases of Russian products since the invasion, and there are no plans for future purchases,” she said.
“We are fully complying with all sanctions, and we support the internationally coordinated efforts to bring Russia’s unprovoked attack to an end,” the spokesperson added.
— Mark Thompson contributed to this report.