The legal fantasy underneath it is even better. Ghost Ship leans into the old movie rule of salvage, which can be summarized as: “find it, tow it, keep it.” Actual admiralty law, alas, is a killjoy. The popular belief that a salvor becomes the owner is erroneous; ordinarily the owner can reclaim the property by paying salvage money. And under the more limited law of finds, a would-be taker must prove intentional abandonment, possession, and intent to reduce the property to ownership. In other words, real salvage law is less “Yo-ho-ho,” and more “Please hold while counsel reviews the paperwork.”
Which brings us to the Arctic Metagaz, a vessel that sounds like the title of a low-budget streaming thriller but is, in fact, a very real LNG tanker having a very bad year. Unlike Ghost Ship’s glamorous phantom liner, the Arctic Metagaz is a working gas carrier, IMO 9243148, built in 2003, now about 23 years old, roughly 909 feet long, about 43.4 meters wide, and sailing under the Russian flag. In plain English, it is less “ghostly palace of the damned” and more “very large refrigerated industrial problem with geopolitical implications.” Public ship databases also show it currently under numerous heavy sanctions imposed by the U.S., the UK, and the EU, which is generally not the sort of accessory that improves resale value.
The ship’s biography reads like a witness trying very hard not to be recognized in a lineup. The vessel’s former names include Berge Everett, BW Suez Everett, BW GDF Suez Everett, BW Everett, Metagas Everest, Everest Energy, and then, eventually, Arctic Metagaz. Some of those earlier names plainly belong to a normal commercial life before sanctions politics swallowed the plot. Others, especially the recent shuffle among Metagas Everest, Everest Energy, and Arctic Metagaz, have all the breezy innocence of a man wearing a fake mustache and insisting he has never, in fact, heard of the bank that was robbed yesterday.The ownership and management picture is as murky as you would expect from a ship floating around the Mediterranean with sanctions attached to it. Reuters reported in October 2025, that the registered owner was Lathyrus Shipping and the commercial manager was Ocean Speedstar Solutions, both with registered addresses in Mumbai which appear to be mail drops for paper corporations. Other reporting around the March 2026 casualty identified the vessel’s Russia-based manager as LLC SMP Techmanagement. The best way to describe this without requiring a chart the size of a dining-room table is that the paper trail points to Mumbai paper companies, while operational responsibility appears to run through Russia. Everyone involved looks less like an old-fashioned shipowner in a commodore’s cap and more like a stack of filing cabinets speaking in accents.
This aging vessel is a perfect example of the Russian “shadow fleet”: aging ships with poor maintenance and a horrible record of environmental issues used to circumvent sanctions imposed after the 2022 invasion of Ukraine. Shadow fleet ships are engaged in illegal operations to circumvent sanctions, evade safety or environmental rules, avoid insurance costs, or engage in other illegal activity.
Then came the part where reality outdid Hollywood for melodrama, while somehow becoming even less cinematic. On March 3, 2026, Reuters reported that the Arctic Metagaz caught fire in the Mediterranean—probably (but unconfirmed) because Ukraine attacked it with a drone—and that its crew was later found safe in a lifeboat within Libya’s search-and-rescue region. There was early confusion, including a Libyan advisory later cited by Reuters as saying the ship had sunk, but later reporting made clear that the vessel was, in fact, still afloat, damaged and drifting unmanned. Even the ship’s obituary had to be retracted. It is hard to look ominous and legendary when the first question is not “What ancient evil lives aboard?” but “Wait, is it sunk, or not sunk?”By March 18, Reuters reported that the damaged tanker had entered Libyan search-and-rescue waters, and by March 20 Italian officials were warning that the vessel posed an “imminent and serious risk” of ecological disaster, estimating that it still carried 450 metric tons of heavy oil, 250 tons of diesel, and an uncertain amount of LNG, with only two of its tanks thought intact. This is the moment where any lingering fantasy of jaunty freelance salvors racing out in a tug to claim a prize should yield to the sober realization that a drifting LNG tanker is not treasure. It is a very large chemistry exam in bad weather.
Libya, understandably, did not treat the matter as a charming adventure and Libya’s coast guard began towing the vessel away from its shores, while the country’s National Oil Corporation worked with Russian and Maltese authorities to prevent a maritime and environmental mess. Then, because the sea enjoys plot twists of its own, the towing operation failed. Reuters and AP both reported that the ship broke loose in bad weather near the limits of Malta’s search-and-rescue zone on April 2. Libyan authorities warned other vessels to keep at least 10 nautical miles away and to report any sign of leaks or smoke. This is not “open for salvage.” This is “please back away slowly from the giant floating danger can.”
According to the latest reliable reporting, the Arctic Metagaz is best described as still adrift in the central Mediterranean after the failed tow, still somewhere in the unhappy neighborhood of Libyan waters and the edge of Malta’s search-and-rescue zone. So, anyone claiming to know the ship’s exact present location from a cheerful little consumer map is either overselling the map, overselling himself, or both. The honest answer is that the latest hard reporting places it out there, loose again, with official authorities trying to keep a dangerous situation from getting worse.Now let us return to the movie myth. Is the Arctic Metagaz available to the first rugged opportunist with a towline, a beard, and a dream? Nope. Very much nope. Under ordinary salvage law, the salvor does not get title merely by rescuing a vessel. He gets, at most, a claim to a salvage award or lien, while ownership remains with the owner, unless very specific legal standards for abandonment are met, and it would probably take a decade to establish who really owns the Arctic Metagaz. “No crew aboard” is not the same thing as “free on Craigslist.”
That, really, is why the Arctic Metagaz fascinates. It is Ghost Ship stripped of romance and left under harsh fluorescent light. It has the eerie, drifting hull, the vanished crew, the uncertain cargo, the maritime rumors, the dramatic photographs, and the sense that something lawless is happening just beyond the horizon. But instead of supernatural gold and demonic ferrymen, the real supporting cast consists of sanctions officials, Libyan maritime authorities, insurance questions, Mumbai registration addresses, Russia-linked management, tracking data, and a lingering environmental threat. It is the same human appetite for mystery, only fed through spreadsheets, acronyms, and emergency advisories.
So the final lesson is almost disappointingly adult. Movies taught us, “find it, tow it, keep it.” The Arctic Metagaz teaches a harsher and much less marketable rule: find it, document it, sanction it, argue over it, tow it badly, lose the tow, warn shipping traffic, and call more lawyers. That version will never sell as many tickets, but it has the distinct advantage of being how the world actually works. The ghost ship of the movies offers a cursed treasure. The ghost spreadsheet of the real Mediterranean offers a 23-year-old LNG tanker, a maze of names, and a reminder that the sea may be romantic, but maritime law absolutely is not.



















