For the project's shipping needs, 21 ice class
LNG carriers of the
Arc7 type were contracted: 15 from the
Zvezda Shipbuilding Complex in Russia and six from
Hanwha Ocean in South Korea. On 24 October 2017, Novatek chairman
Leonid Mikhelson said that the company had handed over the documentation required for the construction of fifteen Arctic class LNG carriers for Arctic LNG 2 to Zvezda Shipyard. In January 2019, Novatek signed equipment supply contracts worth more than US$5 billion, or about one quarter of the project's projected cost. In mid 2019,
Sovcomflot and Zvezda Shipyard signed a contract for four additional LNG carriers to transport LNG from Arctic LNG 2. The vessels were to be delivered by 2025. The order was directly linked to plans for the rapid development of the eastern route, with a transshipment
hub being built in
Kamchatka. In December 2019, SAREN, a joint venture of the Italian company
Saipem and Turkey's Renaissance Construction, part of
Rönesans Holding, received a US$2.2 billion contract to build
gravity-based structures for the project. On 28 June 2019, following a meeting between Russian President
Vladimir Putin and Japanese Prime Minister
Shinzo Abe, an agreement was signed under which Japan would invest US$3 billion in the development of Arctic LNG 2. By the end of 2020, the project was reported to be 32 percent complete, while the first train was 46 percent complete. In May 2021, a group of 39 European lawmakers, mostly from
Alliance 90/The Greens in the
European Parliament, including
Rasmus Andresen, urged the leaders of
Germany,
France, and
Italy in a letter to withdraw support for the US$21 billion Russian Arctic LNG project because of climate concerns. By November 2021, output from Arctic LNG 2 for the plant's first two years of operation had already been sold, and contracts with deliveries beginning in 2025 and 2026 were under discussion. By the end of 2021, the project was reported to be 59 percent complete, while the first train was 78 percent complete. Journalists from
Le Monde and
Der Spiegel reported that, since February 2022, companies from the
United Kingdom, Italy, and the
United States had shipped equipment for Arctic LNG 2 to Russia. Russian customs data indicated that equipment worth US$400 million had arrived from Europe since February of the previous year. According to the reports, this allowed Russia to complete the project's first production train on schedule in July 2023 despite sanctions. In October 2022, Mikhelson also said that Novatek had obtained all equipment needed for Arctic LNG 2 before sanctions were imposed and that the second and third trains would be launched on schedule. In December 2023, reports said that force majeure disruptions had affected supplies involving Chinese and Spanish participants. Sanctions also raised the possibility that the project could take longer than expected to reach full LNG capacity. == Sanctions ==