> #Two Oil Tankers Suffer Mystery Blasts While in Black Sea
>
> By Alex Longley, Patrick Sykes, and Julian Lee
>
> November 28, 2025 at 3:49 PM GMT
>
> Updated on November 28, 2025 at 6:14 PM GMT
>
> Two ocean-going tankers that are heavily sanctioned for carrying Russian oil suffered near-simultaneous blasts off Turkey’s Black Sea coast.
>
> The first, the 900-foot Kairos, was taking on water after an explosion, according to a local port agent report. Turkey’s Directorate General for Maritime Affairs confirmed the incident and said a second ship, the Virat, had also been struck near its coastline and was billowing smoke. The causes are unclear and a rescue operation for both ships was underway.
>
> The pair are two of hundreds of vessels that were amassed to help keep Russia’s oil moving after it invaded Ukraine. Kairos is sanctioned by the UK and European Union, while Virat was designated by the US and EU.
> Link
>
> It’s not the first time that ships linked to Moscow have suffered explosions this year. There was also a spate of blasts in the early months of 2025 that hit merchant ships with a history of calling at Russian ports.
>
> It’s not yet known what happened to these vessels and, if they were attacked, who was responsible.
>
> Spain’s navy, which issues navigational warnings in the region, says there’s also a significant risk posed by floating mines in parts of the Black Sea since the conflict began.
>
> Kairos is a Suezmax-class vessel whose previous voyage was from the Russian port of Novorossiysk to Paradip in India, hauling Moscow’s flagship crude grade Urals. It was heading back to the Russian port to load its next cargo at the time of the incident, according to vessel tracking data compiled by Bloomberg.
> The Kairos oil tanker’s route through the Black Sea
>
> Like the Kairos, the Virat was empty at the time it was struck. It appears to have been idling in the western part of the Black Sea for most of the year after appearing on a US Office of Foreign Assets Control blacklist on Jan. 10.
>
> The managers of both ships, as listed on the international safety database Equasis, didn’t respond to calls and emails requesting comment.
>
> The Bosphorus, a key trade artery for commodities including Russian oil from ports in the Black Sea, remains open. The Kairos sails under the flag of Gambia, the agent said. Equasis doesn’t have a flag listed on Equasis.
HighDeltaVee on
Two Russian oil tankers, which were in the happy state of being :
a) Russian
b) … in international waters
c) … and not loaded with oil.
“Mystery” blasts indeed.
Wregghh on
Sounds like proper sanctions.
GremlinX_ll on
Tough luck
Critical-Exam-2702 on
The Uruguayans are behind it, trust me
CaldariGirl on
The most dangerous time is when you do not want to accept defeat and are ready to escalate without thinking about consequences. We are in that period now.
Mountain_Strategy342 on
Russia’s subsurface fleet is expanding at a rate of knots
sisali on
Russian tankers are blowing up?
Oh no … anyway
bungalowtill on
somehow reminds me of the other Russian tanker explosions this year. must be some weird coincidence.
9 commenti
> #Two Oil Tankers Suffer Mystery Blasts While in Black Sea
>
> By Alex Longley, Patrick Sykes, and Julian Lee
>
> November 28, 2025 at 3:49 PM GMT
>
> Updated on November 28, 2025 at 6:14 PM GMT
>
> Two ocean-going tankers that are heavily sanctioned for carrying Russian oil suffered near-simultaneous blasts off Turkey’s Black Sea coast.
>
> The first, the 900-foot Kairos, was taking on water after an explosion, according to a local port agent report. Turkey’s Directorate General for Maritime Affairs confirmed the incident and said a second ship, the Virat, had also been struck near its coastline and was billowing smoke. The causes are unclear and a rescue operation for both ships was underway.
>
> The pair are two of hundreds of vessels that were amassed to help keep Russia’s oil moving after it invaded Ukraine. Kairos is sanctioned by the UK and European Union, while Virat was designated by the US and EU.
> Link
>
> It’s not the first time that ships linked to Moscow have suffered explosions this year. There was also a spate of blasts in the early months of 2025 that hit merchant ships with a history of calling at Russian ports.
>
> It’s not yet known what happened to these vessels and, if they were attacked, who was responsible.
>
> Spain’s navy, which issues navigational warnings in the region, says there’s also a significant risk posed by floating mines in parts of the Black Sea since the conflict began.
>
> Kairos is a Suezmax-class vessel whose previous voyage was from the Russian port of Novorossiysk to Paradip in India, hauling Moscow’s flagship crude grade Urals. It was heading back to the Russian port to load its next cargo at the time of the incident, according to vessel tracking data compiled by Bloomberg.
> The Kairos oil tanker’s route through the Black Sea
>
> Like the Kairos, the Virat was empty at the time it was struck. It appears to have been idling in the western part of the Black Sea for most of the year after appearing on a US Office of Foreign Assets Control blacklist on Jan. 10.
>
> The managers of both ships, as listed on the international safety database Equasis, didn’t respond to calls and emails requesting comment.
>
> The Bosphorus, a key trade artery for commodities including Russian oil from ports in the Black Sea, remains open. The Kairos sails under the flag of Gambia, the agent said. Equasis doesn’t have a flag listed on Equasis.
Two Russian oil tankers, which were in the happy state of being :
a) Russian
b) … in international waters
c) … and not loaded with oil.
“Mystery” blasts indeed.
Sounds like proper sanctions.
Tough luck
The Uruguayans are behind it, trust me
The most dangerous time is when you do not want to accept defeat and are ready to escalate without thinking about consequences. We are in that period now.
Russia’s subsurface fleet is expanding at a rate of knots
Russian tankers are blowing up?
Oh no … anyway
somehow reminds me of the other Russian tanker explosions this year. must be some weird coincidence.