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How U.S. pension funds help Putin’s gas gambit


Russia needs to ramp up liquefied natural gas exports to replenish Kremlin coffers and fund its war in Ukraine. Western pension funds may inadvertently be lending a hand.

Data compiled by investigative consultancy Data Desk and the Anti-Corruption Data Collective show that public retirement funds, including those managed by the states of Washington, New York and California, have indirectly invested in the specialized ice-class carriers serving Russia’s Yamal LNG — the country’s largest active gas export terminal and a vital piece of its efforts to replace its lucrative trade with Europe.

The Novatek PJSC-led Yamal operation in the Arctic isn’t sanctioned and there is no suggestion that the funds violated any rules. Still, at a time of heightened scrutiny for financial institutions, including from their own investors, the previously unreported link between U.S. investors and one of Moscow’s key sources of income is a reminder of the continued opacity of the global financial system. It also exposes the difficulties of cutting off President Vladimir Putin’s key sources of revenue — even more than two years after the invasion.



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