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GasLog Ltd

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FY2020 Annual Report · GasLog Ltd
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UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE  COMMISSION

Washington, D.C. 20549

(Mark One)

FORM 20-F

(cid:1) REGISTRATION STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 12(b) OR (g)  OF THE  SECURITIES

EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

(cid:2) ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE

ACT OF 1934 FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDED  DECEMBER 31, 2020

(cid:1) TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT  TO  SECTION  13 OR  15(d) OF THE SECURITIES

EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

(cid:1) SHELL COMPANY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES

EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

GasLog Ltd.

(Exact name of Company  as specified in  its charter)

Not Applicable

(Translation of  Company’s name into  English)

Bermuda

(Jurisdiction of  incorporation or  organization)

c/o  GasLog LNG Services Ltd
69 Akti  Miaouli
18537 Piraeus
Greece

(Address  of  principal  executive offices)

Alexandros Laios, General Counsel
GasLog LNG Services  Ltd
69 Akti  Miaouli
18537 Piraeus
Greece
Telephone: +30 210 459  1000 Facsimile:  +30 210 459  1242

(Name, Telephone, E-mail and/or  Facsimile number and Address of  Company contact  person)

SECURITIES REGISTERED OR TO BE REGISTERED PURSUANT TO  SECTION  12(b)  OF  THE ACT:

Title of Each Class

Trading  Symbols

Name  of Each  Exchange on Which  Registered

Common Shares, $0.01 par value per share
Series A Preference Shares, $0.01 par value per  share

GLOG
GLOG  PR  A

New York Stock  Exchange
New  York  Stock  Exchange

SECURITIES REGISTERED PURSUANT TO  SECTION 12(g) OF THE ACT:  None

SECURITIES FOR WHICH THERE  IS  A  REPORTING OBLIGATION PURSUANT  TO SECTION 15(d)  OF  THE  ACT:  None

Indicate the number of outstanding shares of each of the issuer’s  classes of capital  or  common stock  as of  the  close  of  the  period covered by the  annual report.

As of December 31, 2020,  there were 95,176,443 common shares of the  Company’s common  stock  and  4,600,000 Series  A Preference  Shares  issued and  outstanding.

Indicate by check mark if the registrant is a  well-known seasoned issuer,  as  defined  in  Rule 405  of the Securities  Act.

Yes  (cid:1) No (cid:2)

If this report is an annual or transition report,  indicate by  check mark  if the  registrant  is not  required  to  file reports pursuant to  Section 13 or 15(d) of  the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934.

Yes  (cid:1) No (cid:2)

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports  required  to  be  filed by Section  13 or  15(d)  of  the  Securities Exchange Act of 1934  during  the
preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was  required  to  file  such  reports),  and (2)  has been  subject to  such filing requirements for  the  past
90 days.

Yes  (cid:2) No (cid:1)

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted electronically, every  Interactive Data File required  to  be  submitted pursuant  to Rule 405  of  Regulation S-T
(§232.405 of this chapter) during the preceding 12 months (or for  such  shorter  period that the registrant was  required to submit such  files).

Yes  (cid:2) No (cid:1)

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer,  an  accelerated  filer, a non-accelerated filer, or an emerging  growth company.  See definition of
‘‘large accelerated filer’’, ‘‘accelerated filer’’, and ‘‘emerging growth company’’  in Rule  12b-2 of  the  Exchange Act.  (Check  one):
Large accelerated filer (cid:1)

Emerging Growth Company  (cid:1)

Non-accelerated  filer  (cid:1)

Accelerated filer (cid:2)

If an emerging growth company that prepares its financial statements in  accordance  with  U.S.  GAAP, indicate by check mark if  the registrant  has elected not to use the
extended transition period for complying with any new or  revised financial  accounting standards† provided  pursuant to Section 13(a)  of the  Exchange Act.  (cid:1)

† The term ‘‘new or revised financial accounting standard’’ refers to any  update  issued  by  the  Financial  Accounting  Standards  Board  to its Accounting Standards
Codification after April 5, 2012.

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has filed a report on and attestation  to  its  management’s  assessment of  the  effectiveness of its  internal control over
financial reporting under Section  404(b)  of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (15  U.S.C. 7262(b)) by the registered public accounting  firm that  prepared or  issued its  audit report.
Yes  (cid:2) No (cid:1)

Indicate by check mark which basis of accounting  the registrant has used  to  prepare the financial  statements  included in this  filing.

U.S. GAAP (cid:1)

International  Financial Reporting Standards  as issued
by the International Accounting Standards Board  (cid:2)

Other  (cid:1)

If ‘‘Other’’ has been checked in response  to  the previous question, indicate by check  mark  which financial statement  item the registrant has elected to  follow.

Item  17 (cid:1) Item 18 (cid:1)

If this is an annual report,  indicate by check mark whether the registrant  is  a  shell  company  (as defined in  Rule  12b-2  of  the  Exchange Act).

Yes  (cid:1) No (cid:2)

TABLE OF CONTENTS

ABOUT THIS REPORT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
PART I . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
IDENTITY OF DIRECTORS, SENIOR MANAGEMENT AND ADVISERS . .
ITEM  1.
OFFER STATISTICS AND EXPECTED TIMETABLE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
ITEM  2.
KEY INFORMATION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
ITEM  3.
INFORMATION ON THE COMPANY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
ITEM  4.
UNRESOLVED STAFF  COMMENTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
ITEM  4.A.
OPERATING AND FINANCIAL REVIEW AND PROSPECTS . . . . . . . . . . . .
ITEM  5.
DIRECTORS, SENIOR  MANAGEMENT AND EMPLOYEES . . . . . . . . . . . .
ITEM  6.
MAJOR SHAREHOLDERS AND  RELATED PARTY  TRANSACTIONS . . . . .
ITEM  7.
FINANCIAL INFORMATION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
ITEM  8.
THE OFFER AND LISTING . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
ITEM  9.
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
ITEM  10.
QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT  MARKET
ITEM  11.
RISK . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
ITEM  12.
DESCRIPTION OF SECURITIES OTHER THAN EQUITY  SECURITIES . . .
PART II . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
DEFAULTS, DIVIDEND ARREARAGES AND DELINQUENCIES . . . . . . . .
ITEM  13.
MATERIAL MODIFICATIONS  TO THE RIGHTS OF SECURITY
ITEM  14.
HOLDERS AND USE OF PROCEEDS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
ITEM  15.
CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
[RESERVED] . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
ITEM  16.
ITEM  16.A. AUDIT COMMITTEE FINANCIAL EXPERT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
ITEM  16.B. CODE OF ETHICS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
ITEM  16.C.
PRINCIPAL ACCOUNTANT FEES AND SERVICES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
ITEM  16.D. EXEMPTIONS FROM THE LISTING STANDARDS FOR  AUDIT

ITEM  16.E.

COMMITTEES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
PURCHASES OF EQUITY SECURITIES BY THE ISSUER AND
AFFILIATED PURCHASERS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
CHANGE IN COMPANY’S CERTIFYING ACCOUNTANT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
ITEM  16.F.
ITEM  16.G. CORPORATE GOVERNANCE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
ITEM  16.H. MINE SAFETY DISCLOSURE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
PART III . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
ITEM  17.
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
ITEM  18.
ITEM  19.
EXHIBITS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
INDEX TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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F-1

i

In this annual report, unless otherwise  indicated:

ABOUT THIS REPORT

(cid:127) ‘‘GasLog’’, the ‘‘Company’’, the ‘‘Group’’,  ‘‘we’’, ‘‘our’’, ‘‘us’’ or similar  terms  refer  to

GasLog Ltd. or any one or more of its  subsidiaries (including GasLog Partners LP) or their
predecessors, or to such entities collectively, except  that when  such terms  are used in this annual
report in reference to the common shares or the 8.75% Series A Cumulative Redeemable
Perpetual Preference Shares (the ‘‘Preference Shares’’), they  refer to GasLog Ltd.;

(cid:127) ‘‘GasLog Partners’’ or the ‘‘Partnership’’, refers to GasLog Partners LP,  a master limited

partnership formed by GasLog to acquire, own and  operate liquefied natural gas  carriers under
multi-year charters, or any one or more  of  GasLog Partners’ subsidiaries;

(cid:127) the ‘‘general partner’’ refers to GasLog Partners GP LLC, the general partner of GasLog

Partners;

(cid:127) ‘‘GasLog LNG Services’’ refers to  GasLog  LNG Services Ltd.,  our wholly  owned subsidiary;

(cid:127) ‘‘our vessels’’ or ‘‘our ships’’ refers to the  LNG carriers owned or controlled by the Company

and its subsidiaries, including the LNG  carriers owned by GasLog  Partners; ‘‘our wholly  owned
vessels’’ or ‘‘our wholly owned ships’’ refers to the  LNG carriers  owned by  the Company and its
subsidiaries, excluding any LNG carriers owned  by  GasLog Partners (in which  we hold the
controlling general partner interest as well as limited partner interests) and its subsidiaries and
Egypt LNG Shipping Ltd. (in which we hold a 25.0% equity  interest);

(cid:127) ‘‘Merger Agreement’’ refers to the  agreement and plan of merger  dated as of February 21,  2021,

with BlackRock’s Global Energy and Power Infrastructure Team (collectively, ‘‘GEPIF’’),
pursuant to which GEPIF will acquire  all  of  the outstanding  common  shares of GasLog Ltd. that
are not held by certain existing shareholders of GasLog Ltd. for a purchase price of $5.80 in
cash per share (the ‘‘Transaction’’). Following the consummation of the Transaction, certain
existing shareholders including Blenheim  Holdings Ltd. (‘‘Blenheim Holdings’’),  which is  wholly
owned by the Livanos family, and a wholly  owned affiliate of the  Onassis Foundation
(collectively, the ‘‘Rolling Shareholders’’) will continue to hold approximately 55% of the
outstanding shares of GasLog Ltd. and GEPIF will hold approximately 45%;

(cid:127) ‘‘Shell’’ refers to Royal Dutch Shell  plc,  or any one or more of its subsidiaries;

(cid:127) ‘‘BG Group’’ refers to BG Group plc.  BG Group was acquired by Shell on February 15, 2016;

(cid:127) ‘‘MSL’’ refers to Methane Services  Limited, a subsidiary of Shell;

(cid:127) ‘‘Samsung’’ refers to Samsung Heavy Industries  Co.,  Ltd. or any  one or more  of  its  subsidiaries;

(cid:127) ‘‘Hyundai’’ refers to Hyundai Heavy Industries Co., Ltd. or any one or more of its subsidiaries;

(cid:127) ‘‘Total’’ refers to Total Gas & Power Limited—London,  Meyrin—Geneva Branch, a  wholly

owned subsidiary of Total S.A.;

(cid:127) ‘‘Centrica’’ refers to Pioneer Shipping Limited, a wholly owned subsidiary of Centrica  plc;

(cid:127) ‘‘Cheniere’’ refers to Cheniere Marketing International  LLP,  a  wholly owned subsidiary of

Cheniere Energy, Inc.;

(cid:127) ‘‘Trafigura’’ refers to Trafigura Maritime Logistics PTE Ltd.;

(cid:127) ‘‘Egypt LNG’’ refers to Egypt LNG Shipping Ltd.;

(cid:127) ‘‘Gunvor’’ refers to Clearlake Shipping Pte. Ltd., a wholly owned  subsidiary of Gunvor

Group Ltd.;

ii

(cid:127) ‘‘Sinolam’’ refers to Sinolam LNG Terminal, S.A.;

(cid:127) ‘‘Endesa’’ refers to Endesa S.A.;

(cid:127) ‘‘Jera’’ refers to LNG Marine Transport Limited, the  principal  LNG shipping  entity of Japan’s

Jera Co., Inc.;

(cid:127) ‘‘JOVO’’ refers to Singapore Carbon  Hydrogen  Energy  Pte.  Ltd., a wholly owned subsidiary of

JOVO Group;

(cid:127) ‘‘CNTIC VPower’’ refers to CNTIC VPower  Energy Ltd., an independent Chinese energy

company;

(cid:127) ‘‘Glencore’’ refers to ST Shipping &  Transport  Pte.  Ltd.,  a wholly  owned subsidiary of

Glencore PLC;

(cid:127) ‘‘Sea 190 Leasing’’ refers to Sea 190 Leasing Co. Limited, an  indirectly  owned subsidiary of

CMB Financial Leasing Co. Ltd.;

(cid:127) ‘‘Hai Kuo Shipping’’ refers to Hai  Kuo Shipping 2051G  Limited, a wholly owned subsidiary  of

ICBC Financial Leasing Co., Ltd.

(cid:127) ‘‘Gastrade’’ refers to Gastrade S.A.;

(cid:127) ‘‘the Cool Pool’’ refers to The Cool Pool Limited;

(cid:127) ‘‘Ceres Shipping’’ refers to Ceres Shipping  Ltd.;

(cid:127) ‘‘NYSE’’ refers to the New York Stock  Exchange;

(cid:127) ‘‘SEC’’ refers to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission;

(cid:127) ‘‘IFRS’’ refers to International Financial Reporting  Standards;

(cid:127) ‘‘IASB’’ refers to International Accounting  Standards Board;

(cid:127) ‘‘dollars’’ and ‘‘$’’ refers to, and amounts  are presented in, U.S. dollars;

(cid:127) ‘‘LNG’’ refers to liquefied natural gas;

(cid:127) ‘‘FSRUs’’ refers to Floating Storage and Regasification  Units;

(cid:127) ‘‘FSUs’’ refers to Floating Storage Units;

(cid:127) ‘‘TFDE’’ refers to tri-fuel diesel electric  engine propulsion;

(cid:127) ‘‘Steam’’ refers to steam turbine propulsion;

(cid:127) ‘‘cbm’’ refers to cubic meters;

(cid:127) ‘‘mtpa’’ refers to million tonnes per annum;

(cid:127) ‘‘X-DF’’ refers to low pressure dual fuel two-stroke engine  propulsion  manufactured by

Winterthur Gas & Diesel;

(cid:127) ‘‘Dynagas’’ refers to Dynagas Ltd.  and ‘‘Golar’’ refers  to  Golar LNG Ltd.; and

(cid:127) ‘‘Mitsui’’ refers to Mitsui Co., Ltd. and ‘‘Lepta  Shipping’’ refers  to  Lepta Shipping Co., Ltd., a

subsidiary of Mitsui.

iii

FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

All statements in this annual report that are not statements of historical fact  are ‘‘forward-looking
statements’’ within the meaning of the U.S. Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward-
looking statements include statements that address activities,  events or developments  that  the Company
expects, projects, believes or anticipates will  or may  occur  in the future, particularly  in relation to our
operations, cash flows, financial position, liquidity  and cash available for dividends or distributions,
plans, strategies, business prospects and changes and trends in our  business and the markets in  which
we operate. In some cases, predictive, future-tense or forward-looking words such  as ‘‘believe’’,
‘‘intend’’, ‘‘anticipate’’, ‘‘estimate’’, ‘‘project’’,  ‘‘forecast’’, ‘‘plan’’, ‘‘potential’’, ‘‘may’’, ‘‘should’’, ‘‘could’’
and  ‘‘expect’’ and similar expressions are intended  to  identify forward-looking statements, but are not
the exclusive means of identifying such statements. In addition,  we  and our representatives may  from
time to time make other oral or written statements which  are forward-looking  statements,  including in
our periodic reports that we file with the SEC, other information sent to our  security holders and other
written materials. We caution that these forward-looking  statements represent our  estimates and
assumptions only as of the date of this annual  report  or the  date on which  such oral or written
statements are made, as applicable, about factors  that are  beyond our ability to control or  predict and
are not intended to give any assurance  as to future results. Any  of  these  factors or a combination  of
these factors could materially affect future  results of operations  and the ultimate accuracy of the
forward-looking statements. Accordingly,  you should not unduly rely on  any forward-looking  statements.

Factors that might cause future results and outcomes to differ include, but are  not  limited  to,  the

following:

(cid:127) general LNG shipping market conditions and  trends, including spot and multi-year charter  rates,

ship values, factors affecting supply and demand of LNG and LNG shipping, including
geopolitical events, technological advancements and  opportunities for the profitable operations
of LNG carriers;

(cid:127) the ability of GasLog and GEPIF to consummate the Transaction is difficult to predict,  involves
uncertainties that may materially affect actual results and that may be beyond the control  of
GasLog and GEPIF, including, but not  limited  to,  the satisfaction  of  the conditions to the
closing of the Transaction or the occurrence of any  event,  change or other circumstance that
could give rise to the termination of  the  Merger Agreement or cause delays in the
consummation of the Transaction;

(cid:127) fluctuations in charter hire rates, vessel utilization and vessel values;

(cid:127) increased exposure to the spot market and  fluctuations  in  spot charter  rates;

(cid:127) our ability to maximize the use of our vessels, including  the re-deployment or disposition  of

vessels which are not under multi-year charters, including the risk that  certain of  our vessels  may
no longer have the latest technology at such time which  may impact our ability to secure
employment for such vessels as well as the rate  at  which we can  charter such vessels;

(cid:127) changes in our operating expenses, including crew wages, maintenance, dry-docking  and

insurance costs and bunker prices;

(cid:127) number of off-hire days and dry-docking requirements including our ability to complete

scheduled dry-dockings on time and  within budget;

(cid:127) planned capital expenditures and availability  of capital  resources  to  fund capital expenditures;

(cid:127) our ability to maintain long-term relationships and enter into time  charters with new and existing

customers;

iv

(cid:127) disruption to the LNG, LNG shipping  and financial  markets  caused  by global shutdown as  a

result of the COVID-19 pandemic;

(cid:127) business disruptions resulting from measures taken to reduce the  spread of COVID-19, including

possible delays due to the quarantine  of  vessels  and  crew, as well as government-imposed
shutdowns;

(cid:127) fluctuations in prices for crude oil, petroleum products and natural gas;

(cid:127) changes in the ownership of our charterers;

(cid:127) our customers’ performance of their obligations under our time charters and  other contracts;

(cid:127) our future operating performance and expenses, financial condition, liquidity  and cash available

for dividends and distributions;

(cid:127) our ability to obtain debt and equity financing on  acceptable  terms to fund capital expenditures,
acquisitions and other corporate activities, funding by banks of their financial  commitments, and
our  ability to meet our restrictive covenants and other obligations under our  credit facilities;

(cid:127) future, pending or recent acquisitions of  or orders for  ships  or other assets, business strategy,

areas of possible expansion and expected capital  spending;

(cid:127) the time that it may take to construct and deliver newbuildings and the useful lives of our ships;

(cid:127) fluctuations in currencies and interest rates;

(cid:127) the expected cost of and our ability to comply with environmental  and  regulatory  requirements,
including with respect to emissions of air pollutants and greenhouse  gases, as well  as future
changes in such requirements or other actions  taken by regulatory authorities, governmental
organizations, classification societies and standards imposed by  our charterers applicable  to  our
business;

(cid:127) risks inherent in ship operation, including the discharge of pollutants;

(cid:127) the impact of environmental liabilities on us and the shipping industry, including  climate change;

(cid:127) our ability to retain key employees  and the availability of skilled labor,  ship crews  and

management;

(cid:127) potential disruption of shipping routes due  to  accidents, diseases, pandemics,  political events,

piracy or acts by terrorists;

(cid:127) potential liability from future litigation;

(cid:127) any malfunction or disruption of information technology systems and networks that our

operations rely on or any impact of a  possible cybersecurity event; and

(cid:127) other factors discussed in ‘‘Item 3.  Key Information—D. Risk Factors’’ of this annual report.

We  undertake no obligation to update  or revise  any  forward-looking statements contained in this

annual report, whether as a result of new  information, future  events, a change  in our views or
expectations or otherwise, except as required by  applicable law. New factors emerge from time to time
and it is not possible for us to predict  all  of these  factors.  Further, we  cannot assess the  impact  of  each
such factor on our business or the extent  to which any factor, or combination  of  factors, may cause
actual results to be materially different  from those contained  in any forward-looking statement.

v

PART I

ITEM 1.

IDENTITY OF DIRECTORS, SENIOR MANAGEMENT  AND ADVISERS

Not applicable.

ITEM 2. OFFER STATISTICS AND EXPECTED TIMETABLE

Not applicable.

ITEM 3. KEY INFORMATION

A. Selected Financial Data

The following table presents summary consolidated financial and  other data of GasLog for  each  of

the five years in the five-year period  ended December 31, 2020.  The  summary  consolidated  financial
data of GasLog as of December 31, 2019  and  2020, and for each  of  the years in  the three-year period
ended December 31, 2020, is derived from  our audited consolidated financial statements included in
‘‘Item 18. Financial Statements’’. The selected consolidated financial data  as of December 31, 2016,
2017 and 2018, and for the years ended December 31,  2016 and 2017, is  derived from our audited
consolidated financial statements which are not included in this annual  report.  Our consolidated
financial statements are prepared and presented  in accordance with IFRS,  as issued by the IASB.

1

This information should be read together with,  and is qualified in its entirety  by,  our consolidated

financial statements and the notes thereto  included in  ‘‘Item 18. Financial  Statements’’. You  should also
read ‘‘Item 5. Operating and Financial Review and Prospects’’.

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT

OF PROFIT OR LOSS

Revenues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Net pool allocation . . . . . . . . . .
Voyage expenses and

commissions . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Vessel operating and supervision
costs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Depreciation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
General and administrative

Year Ended December 31,

2016

2017

2018

2019

2020

(in thousands of U.S. dollars, except share and per  share data)

$

466,059
(4,674)

$

525,229
7,254

$

618,344
17,818

$

668,637
(4,264)

$

674,089
—

(10,510)

(15,404)

(20,374)

(23,772)

(21,883)

(112,632)
(122,957)

(122,486)
(137,187)

(128,084)
(153,193)

(139,662)
(168,041)

(148,235)
(177,213)

expenses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

(38,642)

(39,850)

(41,993)

(47,385)

(47,249)

Loss on disposal of non-current

assets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Impairment loss on vessels . . . . .

—
—

—
—

—
—

Profit from operations . . . . . . . .

176,644

217,556

292,518

Financial costs
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
Financial income . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . .
(Loss)/gain on derivatives
Share of profit of associates . . . .

(137,316)
720
(13,419)
1,422

(139,181)
2,650
2,025
1,159

(166,627)
4,784
(6,077)
1,800

—
(162,149)

123,364

(190,481)
5,318
(55,441)
1,627

(572)
(28,627)

250,310

(165,281)
726
(84,658)
2,192

Total  other expenses, net . . . . . .

(148,593)

(133,347)

(166,120)

(238,977)

(247,021)

Profit/(loss) for the year . . . . . .

(Loss)/profit attributable to

owners of the Group . . . . . . .

Profit/(loss) attributable to

non-controlling interests . . . . .

(Loss)/earnings per share

(‘‘EPS’’), basic . . . . . . . . . . . .
EPS, diluted . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Weighted average number of

$

$

$

$
$

28,051

$

84,209

(21,486) $

15,506

49,537

$

68,703

(0.39) $
(0.39) $

0.07
0.07

$

$

$

$
$

126,398

$ (115,613) $

3,289

47,683

$ (100,661) $

(44,948)

78,715

0.47
0.46

$

$
$

(14,952) $

48,237

(1.37) $
(1.37) $

(0.63)
(0.63)

shares, basic . . . . . . . . . . . . .

80,534,702

80,622,788

80,792,837

80,849,818

88,011,160

Weighted average number of

shares, diluted . . . . . . . . . . . .
Dividends declared per common
share . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Dividends declared per

preference share . . . . . . . . . .

Special dividends declared per

common share . . . . . . . . . . . .

$

$

$

80,534,702

81,266,130

81,637,022

80,849,818

88,011,160

0.56

2.19

$

$

0.56

2.19

$

$

— $

— $

0.59

2.19

0.40

$

$

$

0.60

2.19

0.38

$

$

$

0.30

2.19

—

2

CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF
FINANCIAL POSITION DATA

Cash and cash equivalents . . . . . . . . .
Short-term investments . . . . . . . . . . .
Investment in associates(1)
. . . . . . . . .
Tangible fixed assets(2)
. . . . . . . . . . . .
Vessels under construction . . . . . . . . .
Right-of-use assets(3)
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
Total assets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Borrowings, current portion . . . . . . . .
Borrowings, non-current portion . . . . .
Lease liability, current portion . . . . . .
Lease liability, non-current portion . . .
Share capital . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Preference Shares . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Equity attributable to owners of the

Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Non-controlling interests . . . . . . . . . .
Total equity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

As of December 31,

2016

2017

2018

2019

2020

(in thousands of U.S. dollars)

$ 227,024
18,000
6,265
3,889,047
96,356
222,004
4,515,164
147,448
2,504,578
5,946
214,455
810
46

$ 384,092
—
20,800
3,772,566
166,655
214,329
4,634,891
179,367
2,368,189
6,302
207,126
810
46

$ 342,594
25,000
20,713
4,323,582
159,275
206,753
5,174,807
520,550
2,307,909
6,675
199,424
810
46

$ 263,747
4,500
21,620
4,427,065
203,323
206,495
5,223,195
255,422
2,891,973
9,363
195,567
810
46

$ 367,269
—
21,759
5,028,509
132,839
203,437
5,856,763
245,626
3,527,595
9,644
186,526
954
46

945,643
564,039
1,509,682

918,029
845,105
1,763,134

879,742
1,103,380
1,983,122

688,335
961,518
1,649,853

645,369
951,768
1,597,137

Year Ended December 31,

2016

2017

2018

2019

2020

(in thousands of U.S. dollars)

CONSOLIDATED CASH FLOW DATA
Net cash provided by operating activities . .
Net cash used in investing activities . . . . . .
Net cash provided by financing activities . . .

$ 256,532
(771,242)
439,766

$223,630
(74,599)
7,265

$ 283,710
(692,999)
368,120

$ 317,423
(442,978)
50,066

$ 288,951
(729,569)
545,954

FLEET DATA(4)
Number of managed ships at end of period . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Average number of managed ships during period . . . . . . . . . .
Number of owned ships at end of period . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Average number of owned ships during  period . . . . . . . . . . . .
Average age of owned ships (years) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Total calendar days for owned and bareboat  fleet
. . . . . . . . . .
Total revenue operating days for owned and  bareboat fleet(5) . .

Year Ended December 31,

2016

2017

2018

2019

2020

25
23.6
22
19.8
5.1
7,568
7,439

23
23.4
22
22
6.1
8,395
8,317

26
25.5
25
24.5
6.4
9,318
9,030

28
27.2
27
26.2
6.9
9,934
9,518

32
30.1
30
28.9
7.0
10,973
10,031

3

Year Ended December 31,

2016

2017

2018

2019

2020

(in thousands of U.S. dollars, except per share data)

OTHER FINANCIAL DATA
Adjusted EBITDA(6)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Adjusted EPS(6) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Capital expenditures:
Payments for fixed assets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Common share dividend declared . . . . . . . . . . .
Preference share dividend declared . . . . . . . . . .

$302,386
(0.03)

$356,048
(0.00)

$447,747
0.57

$461,226
0.29

465,577
0.40

761,513
45,101
10,063

82,352
45,144
10,064

673,823
80,011
10,063

480,553
79,247
10,063

732,385
25,635
10,063

(1)

(2)

(3)

(4)

(5)

Consists of our 25.0% ownership interest in Egypt LNG, our 50.0% ownership interest in the Cool Pool and our investment
in  Gastrade. On October 1, 2015, GasLog, Dynagas and Golar signed  an LNG carrier pooling agreement to establish the
Cool Pool  to market their vessels operating in the LNG shipping spot market. The Cool Pool was incorporated in
September 2015. In June and July 2018, Dynagas  removed  its three  vessels from the Cool Pool and renounced its 33%
ownership in the Cool Pool. On June 6, 2019, GasLog entered into a termination agreement with the Cool Pool and Golar,
whereby  GasLog assumed commercial control of its  six vessels operating in the LNG carrier spot market through the Cool
Pool at that time. Following expiry of their commitments,  GasLog  vessels were withdrawn from the Cool Pool in June and
July  2019. Gastrade is  a private limited  company licensed to develop  an independent natural gas system offshore
Alexandroupolis in Northern Greece utilizing an FSRU along with other fixed infrastructure.

Includes  delivered ships (including dry-docking component of vessel cost) as well as office property and other tangible
assets,  less  accumulated depreciation. See Note 6  to  our consolidated financial statements included elsewhere in this annual
report.

The balances as of December 31, 2016, 2017 and 2018 represented the vessel held under finance lease and was included  in
the financial statement line ‘‘Vessel held under finance lease’’, which was  renamed to ‘‘Right-of-use assets’’ as of January  1,
2019.

Presentation of fleet data does not include newbuildings on order during the relevant periods. The data presented regarding
our owned fleet includes only our owned ships delivered prior to December 31, 2020 including the ships owned by GasLog
Partners. The data presented regarding our managed fleet  includes our  wholly owned vessels as well as ships owned by
GasLog  Partners, Egypt LNG, Lepta Shipping and  Sea  190 Leasing that are or were operating under our management.

The revenue operating days for our owned and bareboat fleet are the total available days after deducting unchartered days.
Available  days represent the total number of days in a  given period that  the vessels (including the Methane Julia Louise and
the GasLog Hong Kong, vessels on a bareboat charter) were in our  possession after  deducting the total number of days
off-hire not recoverable from the insurers and unavailable days (i.e., periods of commercial waiting time during which we
do not earn charter hire, such as days before and after a dry-docking where the vessel has limited ability for chartering
opportunities). We define days off-hire as days lost to, among other things, operational deficiencies, dry-docking for repairs,
maintenance or inspection, equipment breakdowns, special surveys and vessel upgrades, delays due to accidents, crew
strikes, certain vessel detentions or similar problems, our failure to maintain the vessel in compliance with its specifications
and contractual standards or to provide the required crew.

(6)

Non-GAAP Financial Measures:

EBITDA is defined as earnings before depreciation, amortization, financial income and costs, gain/loss on derivatives and
taxes. Adjusted EBITDA is defined as EBITDA before foreign exchange gains/losses, impairment loss on vessels, gain/loss
on disposal of non-current assets and restructuring costs. Adjusted EPS represents earnings attributable to owners of the
Group  before write-off and accelerated amortization of  unamortized loan/bond fees and premium, foreign exchange gains/
losses, unrealized foreign exchange losses on cash and bond, impairment loss on vessels attributable to the owners of the
Group,  the swap optimization costs (with respect to cash collateral  amendments), gain/loss on disposal of non-current
assets,  restructuring costs and non-cash gain/loss on derivatives that includes (if any) (a) unrealized gain/(loss) on derivative
financial instruments held for trading, (b) recycled loss of  cash flow hedges reclassified to profit or loss and (c) ineffective
portion  of cash flow hedges, divided by the weighted average number of shares outstanding. EBITDA, Adjusted EBITDA
and Adjusted EPS are non-GAAP financial measures that are used as  supplemental financial measures by management and
external users of financial statements, such as investors, to assess our financial and operating performance. We believe that
these non-GAAP financial measures assist our management and  investors by increasing the comparability of our
performance from period to period. We believe that  including EBITDA, Adjusted EBITDA and Adjusted EPS assists our
management and investors in (i) understanding and  analyzing the results of our operating and business performance,
(ii) selecting between investing in us and other investment alternatives and (iii) monitoring our ongoing financial and
operational strength in assessing whether to purchase and/or to continue to hold our common shares. This is achieved by

4

excluding the potentially disparate effects between periods of, in the case of EBITDA and Adjusted EBITDA, financial
costs, gain/loss on derivatives, taxes, depreciation and amortization; in the case of Adjusted EBITDA, foreign exchange
gains/losses, impairment loss on vessels, gain/loss on disposal  of non-current assets and restructuring costs; and in the case
of  Adjusted EPS, write-off and accelerated amortization of  unamortized loan/bond fees and premium, foreign exchange
gains/losses, unrealized foreign exchange losses on cash and bond, impairment loss on vessels, swap optimization costs (with
respect to cash collateral amendments), gain/loss on disposal  of non-current assets, restructuring costs and non-cash gain/
loss  on derivatives, which items are affected by various and  possibly changing financing methods, financial market
conditions, capital structure and historical cost basis and  which items may significantly affect results of operations between
periods. In the current year, gain/loss on disposal  of non-current assets is excluded from Adjusted EBITDA and Adjusted
EPS and swap optimization costs (with respect to  cash collateral amendments) are excluded from Adjusted EPS because
gain/loss on disposal of non-current assets, which represents the excess of their carrying amount over the amount that is
expected to be recovered from them in the future and  swap optimization costs (with respect to cash collateral
amendments), which reflect specific actions taken by  management to improve the Group’s future liquidity and profitability,
are charges not considered to be reflective of the ongoing operations of the Group, that we believe reduce the
comparability of our operating and business performance across periods. These additional costs were not previously
incurred in the prior years and therefore no recasting of the prior year non-GAAP financial measures is required.

EBITDA, Adjusted EBITDA and Adjusted EPS  have limitations as  analytical tools and should not be considered as
alternatives to, or as substitutes for, or superior  to,  profit, profit from operations, earnings per share or any other measure
of  operating performance presented in accordance with IFRS. Some of  these limitations include the fact that they do not
reflect (i) our  cash  expenditures  or future  requirements  for capital expenditures or contractual commitments, (ii) changes
in,  or cash requirements for, our working capital needs and (iii) the cash requirements necessary to service interest or
principal payments, on our debt. Although depreciation and amortization are non-cash charges, the assets being depreciated
and amortized will have to be replaced in the future, and EBITDA  and  Adjusted EBITDA do not reflect any cash
requirements for such replacements. EBITDA, Adjusted EBITDA and Adjusted EPS are not adjusted for all non-cash
income or expense items that are reflected in our statements of cash flows and other companies in our industry may
calculate these measures differently from how we calculate such measures, limiting their usefulness as a comparative
measure.

In evaluating Adjusted EBITDA and Adjusted EPS, you  should be aware that in the future we may incur expenses that are
the same as, or similar to, some of the adjustments  in this  presentation. Our presentation of Adjusted EBITDA and
Adjusted EPS should not be construed as an inference that our future results will be unaffected by the excluded items.
Therefore, the non-GAAP financial measures as  presented below may  not be comparable to similarly titled measures of
other  companies in the shipping or other industries.

Reconciliation of Profit/(loss) to EBITDA and Adjusted EBITDA:

Year Ended December 31,

2016

2017

2018

2019

2020

Profit/(loss) for the year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Depreciation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Financial costs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Financial income . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Loss/(gain) on derivatives . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

EBITDA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Foreign exchange losses, net
Loss on disposal of non-current assets . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Impairment loss on vessels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Restructuring costs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

$ 28,051
122,957
137,316
(720)
13,419

301,023
1,363
—
—
—

(in thousands of U.S. dollars)
$126,398
153,193
166,627
(4,784)
6,077

$ 84,209
137,187
139,181
(2,650)
(2,025)

$(115,613)
168,041
190,481
(5,318)
55,441

355,902
146
—
—
—

447,511
236
—
—
—

293,032
1,343
—
162,149
4,702

$
3,289
177,213
165,281
(726)
84,658

429,715
1,351
572
28,627
5,312

Adjusted EBITDA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

$302,386

$356,048

$447,747

$ 461,226

$465,577

5

Reconciliation of (Loss)/profit attributable to owners of  the Group to EPS and Adjusted EPS:

Year Ended December 31,

2016

2017

2018

2019

2020

(in thousands of U.S. dollars, except share and  per share  data)

(Loss)/profit for the year attributable to

owners of the Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

$

(21,486)

$

15,506

$

47,683

$ (100,661)

$

(44,948)

Plus:
Dividend on preference shares . . . . . . . . . .

(Loss)/profit for the year attributable to
owners of the Group used in EPS
calculation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Weighted average number of shares

(10,063)

(10,064)

(10,063)

(10,063)

(10,063)

(31,549)

5,442

37,620

(110,724)

(55,011)

outstanding, basic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

80,534,702

80,622,788

80,792,837

80,849,818

88,011,160

EPS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

(0.39)

0.07

0.47

(1.37)

(0.63)

(Loss)/profit for the year attributable to
owners of the Group used in EPS
calculation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Plus:
Non-cash loss/(gain) on derivatives . . . . . . . .
Write-off and accelerated amortization of

unamortized loan/bond fees and premium
attributable to the owners of the Group . . .
Restructuring costs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Impairment loss on vessels attributable to the

owners of the Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . .

Loss on disposal of non-current assets
Swap optimization costs (with respect to cash

collateral amendments)

. . . . . . . . . . . . .
Unrealized foreign exchange losses/(gains), net
on cash  and bond . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Foreign exchange losses, net . . . . . . . . . . . .

Adjusted (loss)/profit attributable to owners of
the Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Weighted average number of shares

(31,549)

5,442

37,620

(110,724)

(55,011)

4,984

(6,137)

8,211

54,898

64,367

23,097
—

—
—

—

—
1,363

506
—

—
—

—

—
146

—
—

—
—

—

—
236

1,276
4,702

67,952
—

7,368
5,312

12,434
572

—

3,319

4,245
1,343

(4,360)
1,351

(2,105)

(43)

46,067

23,692

35,352

outstanding, basic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

80,534,702

80,622,788

80,792,837

80,849,818

88,011,160

Adjusted EPS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

$

(0.03)

$

(0.00)

$

0.57

$

0.29

$

0.40

6

B. Capitalization and Indebtedness

The following table sets forth our capitalization as of December 31, 2020:

This information should be read in conjunction with  ‘‘Item  5. Operating  and Financial Review  and
Prospects’’, and our consolidated financial  statements  and the  related notes thereto included  elsewhere
in this annual report.

Debt:(1)
Borrowings, current portion(2) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Borrowings, non-current portion(2) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Lease liability, current portion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Lease liability, non-current portion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Total debt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Equity:
Preference Shares(3) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Share capital(3) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Contributed surplus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Reserves . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Treasury shares(3) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Accumulated deficit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Non-controlling interest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Total equity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Total capitalization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

As of
December 31, 2020

(in thousands of
U.S. dollars)

245,626
3,527,595
9,644
186,526

3,969,391

46
954
759,822
18,667
(1,340)
(132,780)
951,768

1,597,137

5,566,528

(1)

(2)

(3)

Our indebtedness, other than under  our Norwegian Kronier (‘‘NOK’’)  denominated bonds issued under the
agreement signed on November 27, 2019,  between GasLog and  the bond  trustee, as amended (the ‘‘NOK 2024
Bonds’’) and the 8.875% senior unsecured notes due in 2022 and issued in March 2017 and May 2019 (the
‘‘8.875% Senior Notes’’), is secured by  mortgages on our  owned ships and is guaranteed by the Company or a
combination of the Company and GasLog Partners, in the case of the Partnership’s indebtedness. The NOK
2024 Bonds and the 8.875% Senior Notes (the carrying amounts of which, net of unamortized financing costs
and premium as of December 31, 2020, $104.0 million and  $313.8 million, respectively) are unsecured.
Borrowings presented do not include our  scheduled debt  payments and our prepayments since December 31,
2020 totaling $190.4 million. See ‘‘Item 5. Operating and Financial  Review and Prospects—B. Liquidity and
Capital Resources—Credit Facilities’’ for more information about our credit facilities.

Borrowings presented at December 31, 2020, are shown net of $68.5  million of loan and bond issuance costs and
premium that are being amortized over the term of  the respective borrowings.

Does not include any shares that may be issued under the Company’s 2013 Omnibus Incentive Compensation
Plan. At December 31, 2020, our share capital consisted of 95,393,126 issued and outstanding common shares,
216,683 treasury shares issued and 4,600,000 Preference Shares  issued and outstanding.

C. Reasons for the Offer and Use of Proceeds

Not applicable.

7

D. Risk Factors

Summary of Risk Factors

An investment in our common shares  or preference shares  is subject  to  a number  of risks,

including risks related to our business and corporate  structure. The following summarizes some, but not
all, of these risks. Please carefully consider  all  of  the information discussed in ‘‘Item  3. Key
Information—D. Risk Factors’’ in this  annual report  for a  more thorough  description of these and
other risks.

Risks Related to the Transaction

(cid:127) The Merger Agreement contains a  number  of  conditions that must be fulfilled  to  complete the
Transaction, some of which may be outside our control. Failure to complete  the Transaction
could negatively affect our share price, or adversely affect our relationships  with our customers,
those whom we have business relationships  with, or our  employees.

Risks Related to the LNG Carrier Business

(cid:127) Failure to control the outbreak of the COVID-19 virus is negatively  affecting the global

economy, energy demand and our business.

(cid:127) We may face difficulty finding long-term charters for our vessels with  similar or better rates than
their initial long-term charters,which  means that our revenues and cash flows from these vessels
may decline. This could have a material adverse  effect  on our  business, results of operations,
financial condition and the value of our assets, and could significantly reduce  or eliminate our
ability to pay dividends on our common or Preference Shares.

(cid:127) If the number of vessels available  in  the short-term  or spot LNG carrier market continues to
expand and results in reduced opportunities to secure  multi-year charters for  our vessels,  our
revenues and cash flows may become  more volatile  and  may  decline following expiration or  early
termination of our current charter arrangements.

(cid:127) An oversupply of LNG carriers as  a result  of  excessive  new speculative ordering in previous

years may lead to a reduction in the charter hire rates that we are able to obtain when seeking
charters which could adversely affect our results of operations and cash flows.

(cid:127) In 2021, six vessels are scheduled to be dry-docked, with two dry-dockings taking longer and

being more costly than normal as a result of the  need  to  install ballast water treatment  systems
(‘‘BWTS’’) on each vessel in order to comply with certain regulatory requirements.  Any  delay or
cost overrun of the dry-docking could  have a  material adverse  effect on  our business, results of
operations and financial condition.

(cid:127) Our future capital needs are uncertain  and we may need to raise  additional funds. We must
make substantial capital expenditures to fund the two newbuildings we have on  order  as of
March 1, 2021, and any additional ships we may acquire in  the future.  In  addition we cannot
guarantee that renewal, replacement or new lines of credit will  be  available or will be available
on similar or more favourable terms.

(cid:127) The COVID-19 virus has had a significant  impact  on all financial  markets, including the price

and the volatility of equities, bonds, commodities, interest rates and  foreign exchange rates and
their associated derivatives, and the availability and cost  of liquidity in the bank credit markets.
These factors, combined with recent declines in the value of our common shares, may make it
difficult for us to raise capital, repay or refinance our debt obligations,  or  fund  our  maintenance
or growth capital expenditures.

8

(cid:127) Our future success depends on our ability to maintain relationships with existing customers,

establish new customer relationships and  obtain new  time charter contracts for existing vessels
and/or FSRUs/FSUs, for which we face considerable  competition.

(cid:127) We derive a substantial majority of  our  contracted revenues from  a  limited number  of

customers, and the loss of any customer, charter or vessel would result in  a significant loss of
revenues and could have a material adverse effect on our  business,  financial  condition, results of
operations and cash flows.

(cid:127) Ship values may fluctuate substantially which may result in impairment charges. A further

decline in ship values could impact our compliance with the covenants  in our loan  agreements
and, if the values are lower at a time when we  are attempting to dispose of ships, cause us to
incur a loss.

Risks Related to Us

(cid:127) Until the completion of the Transaction  or the termination of  the  Merger Agreement, we  may
be restricted from taking certain actions or  making certain business decisions which may be
beneficial to us and our shareholders.

(cid:127) Due to our lack of diversification,  adverse developments  in the LNG  market and/or in the  LNG

transportation industry could adversely affect  our business.

(cid:127) Our contracts for the two newbuildings we  have on  order as of March  1, 2021 are subject to

risks that could cause delays in the delivery of the  ships,  which could adversely  affect our results
of operations and  cash flows.

(cid:127) As we take delivery of our newbuildings or any secondhand ships we may acquire, we will need
to expand our staff and crew. If we  cannot recruit and  retain  employees and provide adequate
compensation, our business, financial condition, results of  operations and cash flows may be
adversely affected.

(cid:127) Our credit facilities are secured by  our ships and  contain payment  obligations and  restrictive
covenants that may restrict our business  and  financing activities  as well as  our ability  to  pay
dividends. A failure by us to meet our  obligations under  our credit  facilities  could  result in an
event of default and foreclosure on our ships.

(cid:127) We are a holding company and we  depend on the ability of our subsidiaries, including GasLog
Partners,  to distribute funds to us in  order to satisfy  our financial obligations and to make
dividend payments.

(cid:127) We are a ‘‘foreign private issuer’’ under NYSE rules, and as such we are entitled  to  exemption

from certain NYSE corporate governance  standards, and you may not  have the same protections
afforded to shareholders of companies that  are subject to all of the NYSE corporate governance
requirements.

(cid:127) Entities controlled by members of the Livanos family are  our principal shareholders and  can

effectively control the outcome of most  matters  on which our shareholders are  entitled to vote;
their interests may be different from yours.

Risks Related to our Preference Shares

(cid:127) Our Preference Shares are subordinated  to  our debt obligations and investors’ interests could be

diluted by the issuance of additional preference shares and  by other transactions.

(cid:127) Holders of our Preference Shares have extremely limited voting  rights.

9

(cid:127) The Preference Shares represent perpetual equity interests and  holders have no right to receive

any greater payment than the liquidation preference regardless of the  circumstances.

Risks Related to the Transaction

In addition to the following risk factors, you should read  ‘‘Item 4. Information  on the Company’’
and the related exhibits for a more complete  discussion of the material considerations relating to the
Transaction (as defined below).

The Merger Agreement with GEPIF is subject to a number  of conditions,  some of which  are  outside of the
parties’ control, and, if these conditions  are not satisfied, the  Merger Agreement may  be  terminated and the
transaction (the ‘‘Transaction’’) may not be  completed.

The Merger Agreement contains a number  of  conditions that must be fulfilled  to  complete the

Transaction. These conditions include,  but  are not limited to, the following conditions: (a)  the
affirmative vote by (i) the holders of  a majority  of the voting power  of our outstanding common  shares
and Preference Shares entitled to vote  thereon,  voting together as a single class  (and with each
Preference Share carrying a single vote)  and  (ii) the  holders of a majority  of the common shares held
by the holders of the issued and outstanding common shares,  other than GEPIF,  the Rolling
Shareholders, the Additional Rolling Shareholders and their  respective affiliates that are  present  at the
special meeting of shareholders that  will  be held in  connection with the Transaction, (b)  obtaining
certain specified third-party consents,  (c) the absence of any judgment  enacted, issued, entered,
amended or enforced by any governmental authority  of competent  jurisdiction  restraining or otherwise
making illegal, preventing or prohibiting the consummation of the Transaction.

The required satisfaction (or waiver) of  the foregoing conditions could  delay the completion of the

Transaction for a significant period of time  or prevent it from  occurring. Any delay in completing  the
Transaction could cause GasLog and  GEPIF not to realize  some or all  of  the benefits that the  parties
expect the Transaction to achieve and  could result in the  Public  Shareholders  not  receiving the  merger
consideration of $5.80 per share. Further, there can be no  assurance that  the  conditions to the closing
of the Transaction will be satisfied or  waived or  that the Transaction will be completed.

In addition, if the Transaction is not  completed by September  30, 2021, either we or GEPIF may

choose to terminate the Merger Agreement. Either party may also elect to terminate the  Merger
Agreement in certain other circumstances, and the parties can  mutually decide to terminate the Merger
Agreement at any  time prior to the closing of the  Transaction,  before  or after shareholder approval, as
applicable.

Failure to complete the Transaction could  negatively affect our  share price.

We  have incurred,  and will continue to incur, significant transaction expenses in  connection with
the Transaction, regardless of whether the  Transaction  is completed.  Furthermore, we may  experience
negative reactions from the financial  markets, including negative impacts on our share price,  or
negative reactions from customers or  other business partners, should  the Transaction not be completed.

The foregoing risks, or other risks arising in connection with any failure to consummate the
Transaction, including the diversion of  management attention from  conducting our business and
pursuing other opportunities during the  pendency of the Transaction, may have an  adverse  effect  on
our  business, operations, financial results  and  share price.  We could also be  subject to litigation related
to any failure to consummate the Transaction or any related  action that could be brought to enforce a
party’s obligations under the Merger Agreement.

10

Litigation against us or the members of our  Board of Directors  or the  Special  Committee  of  the Board of
Directors could prevent or delay the completion  of the  Transaction or result in the payment of  damages
following completion of the Transaction.

It  is a condition to the Transaction that no  governmental authority of competent jurisdiction shall

have enacted, issued, entered, amended or enforced any judgment restraining  or otherwise making
illegal, preventing or prohibiting the consummation of the Transaction. If such a  lawsuit  or other
proceeding is commenced and if in any  such litigation or  proceeding a  plaintiff is successful in
obtaining a restraining order or injunction prohibiting the  consummation  of the Transaction,  then the
closing of the Transaction may be delayed  or may  never occur.  Even if  the  Transaction is permitted  to
occur, the parties may be required to pay damages, fees or expenses  in respect of  claims  related to the
Merger Agreement or the Transaction.

Uncertainty about the Transaction may  adversely affect the relationships  of the parties with their respective
suppliers and employees, whether or not  the Transaction is completed.

In response to the announcement of  the Transaction, existing or prospective customers  or persons

with whom we have business relationships,  including charter  and loan  counterparties,  may delay  or
defer certain business decisions or might  decide to seek to terminate, change  or renegotiate their
relationship with us in connection with  the pending  Transaction,  which could negatively affect our
revenues, earnings and cash available  for distribution,  as well as  our share price, regardless of whether
the Transaction is completed.

In addition, as a result of the Transaction, current and prospective employees could experience
uncertainty about their future with the  Company. These  uncertainties may impair  the consolidated
company’s ability to retain, recruit or  motivate key management, technical and other personnel.

Until the completion of the Transaction or the  termination of  the  Merger Agreement in accordance with  its
terms, in consideration of the agreements made by us and  GEPIF in  the Merger Agreement, we are prohibited
from  entering into certain transactions  and taking  certain actions without  the  consent of GEPIF, some of
which might otherwise be beneficial to GasLog  and GasLog’s shareholders.

Until the Transaction is completed, the  Merger  Agreement restricts  us from taking specified
actions without the consent of GEPIF, and requires us to use  commercially reasonable  efforts to carry
on our business in all material respects  in the  ordinary  course  of  business. These restrictions may limit
our  ability to make appropriate business changes  or pursue  attractive  business opportunities that may
arise prior to the completion of the Transaction.

Risks Inherent in the LNG Carriers  Business

Failure to control the outbreak of the COVID-19 virus is  negatively affecting the global  economy,  energy
demand and our business.

The COVID-19 virus outbreak has introduced uncertainty in a number  of  areas of our business,

including operational, commercial, administrative and  financial  activities. It  has also  negatively
impacted, and may continue to impact  negatively, global economic activity and demand for energy
including LNG. As a result of significantly  lower demand for oil and refined products and the failure of
the principal producers of oil to reduce production  in line with the  fall in  demand, oil prices were
pressured for much of the year. After  reaching  a bottom point  of  $19 per barrel in  March, oil prices
had recovered by the end of the year due  to oil  production  cuts  and a favourable  economic outlook
following the distribution of several COVID-19 vaccines around the world  having worked to balance
the market. Similarly, global natural gas prices  were under sustained pressure  for most of 2020.  Global
gas prices were impacted by lower industrial demand following the COVID-19 pandemic, particularly
during the second and third quarters,  as well as increasing gas  production in export  markets  such as the

11

United States. In addition, a warmer  than average 2019/20 winter in the  Northern  Hemisphere kept
inventories in Europe and parts of Asia  above  their  5-year averages to start the  year  and the  start-up of
new LNG export capacity during 2020 and the ramp up  of facilities which  began production in  2019
added new supply to the market. Although  the LNG market has recently improved and  remains  on a
positive trend, this improvement may not be sustainable in the long-term. In the financial markets, the
virus, and the responses of governments around  the world to manage the impact of the virus, have  led
to lower interest rates and extreme volatility in  the prices of  equities, bonds, commodities and their
respective derivatives. Our share price has declined significantly this year, due in part  to  the impact of
the COVID-19 virus. As of December 31, 2020,  record low interest rates  and exchange  rates, especially
the U.S.  dollar/Norwegian Kroner exchange  rate,  have required  us to post $23.5  million  of  cash
collateral against our current marked-to-market derivative  liabilities.  The ongoing  spread of the
COVID-19 virus may negatively affect  our business and operations, including our newbuildings under
construction in South Korea, the health of  our crews and the availability of our fleet, particularly if
crew members contract COVID-19, as well as our financial position and prospects. A future reduction
in LNG demand and new closure of,  or restricted  access to, ports and  terminals  in regions affected by
the virus may lead to reduced future  chartering activity and,  in the extreme,  an inability of our
charterers to meet their obligations under  the terms  of their  term charters. Furthermore, we  may be
unable to secure charters for our vessels  at  rates  that  are sufficient  to  meet our  financial  obligations.
We  have eight vessels in the spot market,  and these  vessels are currently experiencing reduced spot
charter rates and demand compared to their  initial long-term  charters.  Continued exposure to the  spot
market or extended periods of idle time between charters could adversely  affect our future  liquidity,
results of operations and cash flows.  Failure  to  control the spread of the virus could significantly impact
economic activity and demand for LNG  and LNG shipping  which could further negatively affect our
business, financial condition and results  of operations. Should the COVID-19 pandemic continue to
negatively impact market rates in the  long-term, there would be a significant negative impact on  our
liquidity and financial condition, as well  as the future carrying values  of  our vessels  could  be  further
affected due to a potential unfavorable  permanent impact in  the key assumptions,  such as  the estimates
of future charter rates for non-contracted  revenue days and  the discount  rate in our  future impairment
assessments.

As  of March 1, 2021, our owned and bareboat fleet consists of 33  LNG carriers (including  the 15 LNG
carriers owned by GasLog Partners) and two newbuilds. 17 of our ships  currently operate under long-term
time charters (defined as those with initial  duration of more than  five years)  with 16 ships trading in the
short-term spot market (defined as contracts  with  initial duration of less  than five years). On redelivery,  the
vessels will trade in the short-term spot  market unless we  are able to secure new long-term charters.
Furthermore, advances in LNG carrier technology may negatively  impact our ability to  recharter the Steam or
TFDE vessels at attractive rates and may  result in lower  levels of  utilization. Operating vessels in the  spot
market, or being unable to recharter the vessels on long-term  charters  with similar or better rates,  means  our
revenues  and cash flows from these vessels will decline following expiration of  our current charter
arrangements. These factors could have  a  material adverse effect on  our  business, results  of operations,
financial condition and the value of our  assets, and could significantly reduce or  eliminate our ability to  pay
dividends on our common or Preference shares.

17 of  our owned and bareboat vessels  (including seven of the  15 LNG Carriers  owned by GasLog

Partners) and two of our newbuild vessels  currently  operate or will operate under  long-term time
charters (defined as those with initial  duration of more than  five  years).  16 of our vessels (including
eight vessels owned by GasLog Partners) are currently trading in the  short-term spot  market  (defined
as contracts with initial duration of less than  five  years).

Six of the vessels (including five vessels  owned by GasLog Partners) operating in the  short-term

spot market are Steam vessels. Our Steam  vessels  are less efficient and have higher emissions than
larger, more technologically advanced modern  LNG carriers  and it  may be more challenging to find

12

spot and/or term employment for these vessels, in the future. Unless we are able  to  secure longer term
charters  at attractive rates we will have exposure to the spot market which  is highly competitive and
subject to significant price fluctuations.  In addition, there  may be extended periods of idle time
between charters. Moreover, any longer term  charters  we are able  to  secure  for on-the-water vessels
may not be as long in duration as the multi-year charters  we  have enjoyed in  the past and are likely to
be at lower charter rates. In recent years, as  a result  of  more LNG being traded on a short-term  basis
and greater liquidity in the LNG shipping  market than was historically the  case, there has  been a
decrease in the duration of term charters  for on-the-water vessels with such charters now generally
being anywhere between six months and  three  years  in duration.  If we are unable  to  secure
employment for a vessel, we will not  receive  any revenues from  that vessel  but we  will  be  required to
pay expenses necessary to maintain the vessel  in proper  operating condition, as  well as servicing the
debt attached to the vessel.

Due to these risks, on February 6, 2020, in light of reduced expectations for Steam vessel
utilization and earnings GasLog Partners  announced that  it will focus  its capital allocation on  debt
repayment and prioritizing balance sheet  strength. As  such, the Partnership reduced its quarterly
common unit distribution to $0.125 per unit  for the  first  quarter  of 2020, from  $0.561 per unit for the
fourth quarter of 2019 and then further  decreased its quarterly common unit  distribution to $0.01 per
unit for the third quarter of 2020 onwards.

GasLog Partners and GasLog continue to pursue opportunities for  new term time charters with
third parties for the vessels trading in the  spot market but  may  have difficulty in securing new  charters
at attractive rates and for multi-year  durations. In the interim,  we may have  increased  exposure to the
volatile spot market which is highly competitive and  subject to significant price fluctuations.  In addition,
there may be extended periods of idle time  between  charters.  Moreover,  any term  charters  we are  able
to secure for on-the-water vessels may not be as  long in duration as  the multi-year charters  we have
enjoyed  in the past and are likely to  be  at  lower charter rates. In recent years, as a result of more LNG
being traded on a short-term basis and  greater liquidity in the LNG  shipping market, there has  been a
decrease in the duration of term charters  for on-the-water vessels with such charters now generally
being anywhere between six months and  three  years  in duration.  If we are unable  to  secure
employment for a vessel, we will not  receive  any revenues from  that vessel  but we  will  be  required to
pay expenses necessary to maintain the vessel  in proper  operating condition, as  well as servicing the
debt attached to the vessel.

Failure to secure new term charters could adversely affect our future  liquidity, results of  operations
and cash flows, including cash available  for dividends to our shareholders,  as well as our  ability to meet
certain of our debt obligations and covenants.

A sustained decline in charter rates and employment opportunities could  adversely affect  the
market value  of our vessels, on which certain of the  ratios  and financial covenants  with which  we are
required to comply are based, and caused  the Group to recognize  a  total non-cash impairment loss of
$28.6 million during the year ended December 31, 2020 for  five  of its  six Steam  vessels  built in 2006
and 2007. A significant decline in the  market  value  of  our  vessels  could impact  our compliance with  the
covenants in our loan agreements and,  if  the values are  lower at a time when  we are  attempting to
dispose of vessels, could cause us to incur a loss. If  any of our  vessels  is unable to generate revenues
for any significant period of time for  any reason, including unexpected periods of off-hire,  early charter
termination (which could result from  damage to our vessels) or failure to secure employment for  any
vessels for which we have not secured charters, our  business,  financial condition, results  of  operations
and cash flows, including cash available  for dividends to our shareholders,  could  be  materially and
adversely affected. The impact of any  limitation in  the operation of our vessels or any early charter
termination would be magnified by the fact that we would still be expending cash to cover  the
operating costs of the vessel and the costs of servicing  the debt on the  vessel,  if any. If  we are  unable
to re-deploy a vessel, we will not receive  any revenues from that vessel and we  would be required to

13

pay expenses necessary to maintain the vessel  in proper  operating condition as  well as to service the
debt attached to that vessel.

If the number of vessels available in the  short-term or spot LNG carrier  market  continues to expand and
results in reduced opportunities to secure multi-year charters for our vessels, our revenues and  cash flows may
become more volatile and may decline following  expiration  or early termination of our  current charter
arrangements.

Most shipping requirements for new LNG projects continue  to  be  secured on a multi-year basis,

although the level of spot voyages and  short-term time charters of less than  12 months  in duration  has
grown in recent years. As vessels currently operating under multi-year charters  redeliver,  the number  of
vessels available in the short-term or spot charter market is likely to continue to expand which  may
result in reduced opportunities to secure multi-year charters for our vessels. With  our  vessels  trading in
the short-term or spot market upon expiration or early termination of our current charters, our
revenues and cash flows may become  more volatile.  In  addition, an active short-term or  spot charter
market may require us to enter into  charters on variable rates  depending on market  prices at the time,
as opposed to fixed rates, and may result in  extended periods  of  idle time  between charters.  These
factors could  result in a decrease in our revenues and  cash  flows, including cash available for  dividends
to shareholders.

An oversupply of LNG carriers as a result  of excessive new speculative ordering in  previous years may  lead to
a reduction in the charter hire rates we  are able to obtain when seeking charters in the future which could
adversely affect our results of operations and  cash flows.

While we currently believe that the global LNG carrier fleet may experience  high levels  of

utilization over the next one to two years,  the  supply of LNG carriers has been  increasing  as a result of
the ordering and delivery of new ships.  Following a  decline in ordering of newbuildings during 2016
and 2017, ordering increased in 2018 and  2019, driven by cyclically low  shipyard prices for newbuild
vessels, the then strengthening of charter rates and increasing expectations  for long-term  LNG supply
and demand. Whilst ordering of newbuildings declined in 2020, with only 35 LNG carriers ordered, all
for long-term business with no vessels ordered on a  speculative  basis, speculative newbuildings ordered
in 2019 may still impact charter rates. According to Poten, as of February 26, 2021, the global trading
fleet of conventional LNG carriers (>100,000 cbm) consisted of 538 vessels, with another 112 LNG
carriers on order, of which 86 have long-term charters. The large number of ordered newbuildings that
remain uncommitted and any future expansion of the global  LNG  carrier  fleet  in excess of the  demand
for LNG shipping may have a negative  impact  on charter hire rates,  vessel  utilization and  vessel  values.
If charter hire rates are lower when we are seeking new time charters, or if we  are unable to secure
employment for our vessels trading in the  spot and short-term markets,  as a result  of increased
competition from modern vessels, our  revenues and cash  flows, including cash available for dividends to
shareholders, may decline.

In 2021, six vessels (one GasLog wholly-owned vessel  and  five GasLog Partners vessels)  are  scheduled to be
dry-docked. The dry-dockings for two of  these  vessels will be longer  and more costly than normal  as  a result
of the need to install BWTS on each vessel  in order to comply with  regulatory requirements.  Any delay or  cost
overrun of the dry-docking could have a material adverse effect on our business, results of  operations and
financial condition and could significantly reduce or eliminate our ability to pay dividends on our common or
Preference shares.

Dry-dockings of our vessels require significant expenditures and result in  loss of  revenue as  our
vessels are off-hire during such period.  Any significant  increase in  either the number of off-hire  days or
in the costs of any repairs or investments carried out during the dry-docking period  could  have a
material adverse effect on our profitability and our cash  flows. Given the potential for unforeseen

14

issues arising during dry-docking, we  may not be able  to  predict accurately the  time required to
dry-dock any of our vessels. In 2021, the  two  dry-dockings will be longer and more  costly  than normal
as a result of the need to install BWTS on the vessels in  order to comply  with regulatory requirements.
Furthermore, the COVID-19 virus, and  implementation of additional  ‘‘stop work’’ orders in Singapore,
may impact the availability of dry-dock  yard slots and  our  ability to source  the required  personnel and
equipment. If more than one of our  ships  is required to be  out of  service  at the  same time,  or if a ship
is dry-docked longer than expected or if  the cost  of  repairs  is greater  than  budgeted, our results  of
operations and our cash flows, including  cash available  for dividends to our shareholders,  could  be
adversely affected. The upcoming dry-dockings of vessels are  expected to be carried out  in 2023 (eight
vessels) and 2024 (six vessels).

Our future capital needs are uncertain  and  we  may need to  raise additional funds.  We must  make substantial
capital expenditures to fund the two newbuildings we  have on order  as of  March 1, 2021, and  any  additional
ships we may acquire in the future. In  addition  we cannot  guarantee that renewal, replacement or new  lines of
credit will be available or will be available on  similar or  more favourable terms.

We  believe that our existing cash and  cash equivalents and  our operating cash flow will be

sufficient to meet our anticipated cash requirements  for at least the next 12 months. However,  we are
obligated to make substantial capital expenditures to fund our commitments  for the  two newbuildings
we have on order. We are scheduled  to  take delivery  of  the vessels during 2021. As of December 31,
2020, the total remaining balance of  the contract  prices for the two vessels under construction  was
$321.1 million (excluding the GasLog Galveston which was delivered on January 4, 2021), which
amounts are payable under each shipbuilding  contract in installments upon the  attainment of certain
specified milestones. The largest portion of  the purchase price for  each vessel is payable upon its
delivery to us from the shipyard.

To the extent that we are unable to draw down the  amounts committed under our existing credit
facilities, whether due to our failure to comply with the terms of such facilities  or the lenders’  failure to
fund the committed amounts, or to the extent that  we are unable  to  put in  place new debt  facilities  of
sufficient quantum and on acceptable  terms, we will  need to  find alternative financing. If we are unable
to find alternative financing, we will  not  be capable of funding all of our commitments for capital
expenditures relating to our two contracted newbuildings. If we fail to meet our payment obligations
under a shipbuilding contract, we would be in default under the applicable contract and  the shipbuilder
would have the option of cancelling the contract and retaining any previously  funded  installment
payments.

Our ability to borrow against the ships in our  existing fleet and  any ships we may acquire in the
future largely depends on the value of  the ships, which in turn depends in part on charter hire rates
and the ability of our charterers to comply with the  terms of their charters. The actual or  perceived
credit quality of our charterers, and any  defaults by them, may materially affect our ability to obtain
the additional capital resources that  we  will require to purchase additional  ships and to refinance our
existing debt as balloon payments come due,  or may significantly increase  our costs of obtaining such
capital. Our inability to obtain additional  financing or committing to financing on unattractive terms
could have a material adverse effect  on  our business, financial condition, results of operations and cash
flows, including cash available for dividends to our  shareholders.

In addition, we may choose to make  substantial  further capital expenditures to expand the size of
our  fleet and/or to convert existing LNG  carriers to FSRUs/FSUs in  the future. We expect  to  finance
the cost of any new vessels, including conversion costs through available cash, cash from operations  and
debt or equity financings. Our ability  to  obtain bank financing or to access the capital markets may be
limited by our financial condition at the  time of  any such financing or offering, as well as by adverse
market conditions resulting from, among other  things, general economic  conditions, changes in the
LNG industry, changes to banking regulations and further contingencies and uncertainties that are

15

beyond our control. The recent significant fall in the value of our common shares may make it  difficult
or impossible for us to access the equity or  equity-linked capital markets.  Even if we  are successful  in
obtaining the necessary funds, the terms of any debt  financings could limit our ability further to expand
our  fleet and to pay dividends to our shareholders.

Securing access to additional funds in  advance  of the maturity of our  debt facilities cannot  be
assured on the same or similar terms. Debt  financing, if  available,  may involve covenants restricting our
operations or our ability to incur additional  debt  or to pay dividends to our shareholders. Any debt or
additional equity financing raised may  contain unfavorable terms to us  or  our  shareholders. If we are
unable to raise adequate funds, we may  have  to  liquidate some or  all of our  assets, or delay, reduce  the
scope of or eliminate some or all of  our fleet expansion plans.

Any of these factors could have a material adverse effect on our business, financial  condition,

results of operations and cash flows,  including  cash available for dividends to our shareholders.

Our future ability to raise capital to repay or refinance our debt obligations  or to  fund our  maintenance  or
growth capital expenditures will depend  on  certain financial, business and  other  factors, many of which are
beyond our control. The COVID-19 virus has  had a significant impact  on all  financial  markets, including the
prices  and the volatility of equities, bonds,  commodities, interest rates and foreign  exchange rates  and their
associated derivatives, and the availability  and cost  of liquidity  in  the  bank credit markets. The  recent
significant fall in the value of our common shares may make it difficult or impossible for us to access the
equity or equity-linked capital markets. The  recent fall  in  U.S. interest  rates  has  required us  to post cash
collateral against our current marked-to-market derivative liabilities. To the  extent that we are unable to
finance these obligations and expenditures with cash  from operations or incremental  bank loans  or by  issuing
debt or equity securities, our ability to make  cash dividends may be diminished, or our financial leverage  may
increase, or our shareholders may be diluted.  Our business may be  adversely affected if  we need to  access
sources of funding which are more expensive and/or more restrictive.

To fund our existing and future debt  obligations and  capital expenditures and  any future growth,
we will be required to use cash from operations,  incur borrowings,  and/or seek  to  access other financing
sources  including the capital markets. Our  access to potential  funding sources and our future  financial
and operating performance will be affected by prevailing  economic conditions and financial, business,
regulatory and other factors, many of which are  beyond  our  control.  The COVID-19 virus has had, and
may continue to have, a significant negative impact on global financial  markets. If  we are  unable to
access the capital markets or raise additional  bank financing or generate sufficient  cash flow to meet
our  debt, capital expenditure and other  business requirements, we may be  forced  to  take actions such
as:

(cid:127) seeking waivers or consents from our creditors;

(cid:127) restructuring our debt;

(cid:127) seeking additional debt or equity capital;

(cid:127) selling assets;

(cid:127) reducing dividends;

(cid:127) reducing, delaying or cancelling our  business  activities, acquisitions, investments  or capital

expenditures; or

(cid:127) seeking bankruptcy protection.

Such measures might not be successful,  available on acceptable terms  or enable us to meet  our

debt, capital expenditure and other obligations. Some of these measures may adversely affect our
business and reputation. In addition,  our  financing agreements may restrict our ability to implement

16

some of these measures. Use of cash from  operations and  possible future sale  of  certain assets will
reduce cash available for dividends to shareholders. Our  ability  to  obtain bank financing or to access
the capital markets may be limited by our financial  condition  at  the  time  of any such  financing or
offering as well as  by adverse market conditions. Following  the recent significant fall in the value of our
common shares, we may not be able  to  access the equity or equity-linked capital  markets.  Even if we
are successful in obtaining the necessary funds, the  terms of such financings could limit our ability to
pay cash  dividends to shareholders or  operate our business as currently  conducted. In addition,
incurring additional debt may significantly increase our  interest expense and financial  leverage, and
issuing additional equity securities may  result in significant shareholder  dilution  and would  increase the
aggregate amount of cash required to maintain our  quarterly dividends to shareholders. Despite the
recent refinancing of the Group’s debt  maturities due in 2021, our liquidity position could be
challenged in the future, and we may  need to raise equity in  order to remain in compliance with the
financial covenants in our loan facilities.

We may  experience operational problems  with vessels that reduce  revenues and increase costs. In addition,
there are risks associated with operating ocean-going ships.  Any limitation in the availability  or operation of
our ships could have a material adverse effect on our business, our reputation,  financial condition, results of
operations and cash flows.

LNG carriers are complex and their operations are technically  challenging.  Marine transportation

operations are subject to mechanical  risks and problems. Operational problems may lead to loss of
revenues or higher than anticipated operating expenses or  require  additional capital  expenditures.

Furthermore, the operation of ocean-going ships carries inherent risks. These risks include the

possibility of:

(cid:127) marine disaster;

(cid:127) piracy;

(cid:127) cyber events or other failures of operational and information technology systems;

(cid:127) environmental accidents;

(cid:127) adverse weather conditions;

(cid:127) grounding, fire, explosions and collisions;

(cid:127) cargo and property loss or damage;

(cid:127) business interruptions caused by mechanical failure,  human error, war, terrorism, disease (such

as the outbreak of the COVID-19 virus) and quarantine,  or  political  action  in various countries;

(cid:127) declining operational performance due  to  physical degradation as a result of extensive idle  time

or other factors; and

17

(cid:127) work stoppages or other labor problems with crew  members serving on  our  ships.

An accident involving any of our owned  ships  could  result in any of the  following:

(cid:127) death or injury to persons, damage  to  our  ships,  loss of  property  or environmental damage;

(cid:127) delays in the delivery of cargo;

(cid:127) loss of revenues from termination of charter  contracts;

(cid:127) governmental fines, penalties or restrictions on  conducting business;

(cid:127) litigation with our employees, customers or third parties;

(cid:127) higher insurance rates; and

(cid:127) damage to our reputation and customer relationships generally.

If any of our ships are unable to generate revenues for  any significant period  of  time for any
reason, including unexpected periods  of off-hire or early charter termination (which could result from
damage  to our ships), our business, financial condition, results of operations and  cash flows, including
cash available for dividends to our shareholders, could  be  materially and adversely affected.  The impact
of any limitation in the operation of our  ships or any early charter  termination would be amplified, as a
substantial portion of our cash flows  and  income  is dependent  on the revenues earned  by  the
chartering of our 33 LNG carriers in  operation. In addition, the costs  of ship repairs are unpredictable
and can be substantial. In the event of  repair costs  that  are not covered by our insurance policies, we
may have to pay for such repair costs,  which  would decrease our  earnings and cash  flows. Any of  these
results could harm our business, financial  condition,  results of operations  and our ability to pay cash
dividends to our shareholders.

A cyber-attack could materially disrupt  GasLog’s business.

GasLog’s business operations could be targeted by individuals or groups  seeking to sabotage or

disrupt GasLog’s information technology systems and networks, or to steal data. A  cyber-attack could
materially disrupt GasLog’s operations,  including the  safety of its operations, or lead to unauthorized
release of information or alteration of  information on  its systems.  Any such attack or other breach of
GasLog’s information technology systems could have  a material adverse effect on GasLog’s  business,
financial condition, results of operations and cash flows, including cash  available  for dividends to our
shareholders. While we have insurance  policies  in place to cover losses  in the event of a  cyber related
event, there can be no assurance that any  specific event would  be  covered by these policies or  that  the
losses would be covered in full.

We  are subject to laws, directives, and  regulations relating to the collection,  use, retention,

disclosure, security and transfer of personal data.  These laws, directives and regulations,  as well as their
interpretation and enforcement, continue  to evolve and may be inconsistent from jurisdiction  to
jurisdiction. For example, the General  Data Protection Regulation (‘‘GDPR’’), which regulates the  use
of personally identifiable information, went into effect in  the European  Union (‘‘EU’’)  on May 25, 2018
and applies globally to all of our activities conducted from an establishment in the EU, to related
products and services that we offer to EU  customers and  to non-EU customers which offer services in
the EU. The GDPR requires organizations  to  report on  data breaches  within 72 hours and be bound
by more stringent rules for obtaining the  consent  of individuals on how  their data can be used.
Complying with the GDPR and similar emerging and changing privacy and data protection
requirements may cause us to incur substantial  costs or require us  to  change our business practices.
Non-compliance with our legal obligations  relating to privacy and  data protection  could  result in
penalties, fines, legal proceedings by  governmental entities or others,  loss of reputation, legal claims  by

18

individuals and customers and significant  legal and financial exposure and could affect our ability to
retain and attract customers.

Changes in the nature of cyber threats and/or changes to industry standards  and regulations might
require us to adopt additional procedures for monitoring cybersecurity,  which could require additional
expenses and/or capital expenditures.  However,  the impact  of such  regulations is hard to predict at this
time.

Our future success depends on our ability to maintain relationships with  existing  customers,  establish new
customer relationships and obtain new time  charter contracts for existing vessels  and/or FSRUs/FSUs, for
which we face considerable competition from  other established  companies with significant resources, as well as
recent and potential future new entrants.

One  of our principal objectives is to  enter into multi-year, fixed-rate charters for our open
on-the-water vessels and for potential  additional newbuild vessels. We are  seeking  to  enter into
long-term time charter contracts for  some or all of the  16 vessels currently trading in the short-term
spot market (as defined those contracts  with initial  duration of less than five years). We  will  also seek
to enter into new time charter contracts upon the expiration or early termination of our existing  charter
arrangements. The process of obtaining multi-year, fixed rate charters for LNG  carriers  is highly
competitive and generally involves an intensive  screening process by  potential new  customers and the
submission of competitive bids. The process is lengthy and the LNG carrier time charters  are awarded
based upon a variety of factors relating to the  ship and the  ship operator, including:

(cid:127) size, age, technical specifications and condition of the  ship;

(cid:127) LNG shipping experience and quality  and  efficiency of ship  operations, including level  of

emissions;

(cid:127) shipping industry relationships and reputation for customer service;

(cid:127) technical ability and reputation for operation  of highly specialized ships;

(cid:127) quality and experience of officers and crew;

(cid:127) safety record;

(cid:127) the ability to finance ships at competitive rates  and  financial stability generally;

(cid:127) relationships with shipyards and the ability  to  get suitable  berths;

(cid:127) construction and dry-docking management experience, including the ability to obtain on-time

delivery of new ships according to customer specifications; and

(cid:127) competitiveness  of the bid in terms of charter rate and  other economic  and commercial  terms.

We  expect substantial competition from a  number of  experienced companies and recent and

potential future new entrants to the LNG shipping  market.  Competitors may include other  independent
ship owners, state-sponsored entities and  major energy  companies that own  and operate LNG carriers,
all of whom may compete with independent  owners by using their own  fleets to carry LNG  for third
parties. Some of these competitors have significantly greater financial resources and larger fleets than
we have, and some have particular relationships that may  provide them with competitive advantages. In
recent years, a number of marine transportation companies,  including  companies with  strong
reputations and extensive resources and experience, have  either entered or  significantly  increased  their
presence in the LNG transportation  market. There are other ship owners,  managers  and investors who
may also attempt to participate in the LNG market in the future. This  increased competition may  cause
greater price competition for time charters. As  a result,  we may be unable to expand  our  relationships
with existing customers or to obtain new  customers  on a  profitable basis and we  may not be successful

19

in executing any future growth plans,  which could have  a material adverse effect on our  business,
financial condition, results of operations and cash flows, including cash  available  for dividends to
shareholders.

We derive a substantial majority of our contracted  revenues from a limited number of  customers,  and the loss
of any customer, charter or vessel would  result  in  a significant loss of revenues  and could have a  material
adverse effect on our business, financial  condition, results  of operations and cash flows.

For the year ended December 31, 2020,  57.2% of our revenues derived from wholly owned
subsidiaries of Shell. We could lose a customer  or the benefits  of  our time  charter arrangements  for
many  different reasons. The customer  may be unable or  unwilling to make charter hire or  other
payments to us because of a deterioration in its financial condition, commercial disputes  with us,
long-term force majeure events or otherwise. If a  customer terminates  its  charters, chooses not to
re-charter our ships or is unable to perform  under its charters and we  are not able to find replacement
charters  on similar or more favourable terms, we  will  suffer a  loss of revenues.

Our charterer has the right to terminate a ship’s time charter  in certain  circumstances, such as:

(cid:127) loss of the ship or damage to it beyond repair;

(cid:127) if  the ship is off-hire for any reason  other  than  scheduled dry-docking for a period exceeding 90

consecutive days, or for more than 90  days in any one year period;

(cid:127) defaults by us in our obligations under  the charter; or

(cid:127) the outbreak of war or hostilities involving two or more  major nations,  such as the United States
or the People’s Republic of China, that  would materially  and adversely affect the trading of the
ship for a period of at least 30 days.

A termination right under one ship’s time charter would  not  automatically give the charterer the
right to terminate its other charter contracts with us. However,  a charter  termination could materially
affect our relationship with the customer and our reputation  in the LNG shipping industry, and in
some circumstances the event giving rise to the termination right  could potentially impact multiple
charters.

Accordingly, the existence of any right  of  termination or the loss of any customer, charter  or vessel
could have a material adverse effect  on  our business, financial condition, results of operations and  cash
flows, including cash available for dividends to shareholders.

Ship values may fluctuate substantially over time due to different factors, which may result in impairment
charges that may be recorded in our financial statements. During the year ended December 31, 2020, we
recorded a total non-cash impairment charge of $28.6 million for five of our six Steam vessels built in 2006
and 2007, including four GasLog Partners vessels and one vessel wholly owned by us. A further decline in
ship values in the future could impact our compliance with the covenants in our loan agreements and, if the
values are lower at a time when we are attempting to dispose of ships, cause us to incur a loss.

Values for ships can fluctuate substantially over time  due to a number  of  different  factors,

including:

(cid:127) prevailing economic conditions in the  natural gas  and  energy markets;

(cid:127) a substantial or extended decline in  demand for  LNG;

(cid:127) the level of worldwide LNG production and exports;

(cid:127) changes in the supply and demand balance of the global  LNG  carrier fleet and  the size and

contract profile of the LNG carrier orderbook;

20

(cid:127) changes in prevailing charter hire rates;

(cid:127) declines in levels of utilization of the global LNG carrier  fleet  and  of  our vessels;

(cid:127) the physical condition of the ship;

(cid:127) the size, age and technical specifications of the  ship; and

(cid:127) the cost of retrofitting or modifying existing ships, as  a result of  technological advances in ship
design  or equipment, changes in applicable environmental or other  regulations or standards,
customer requirements or otherwise.

If the market value of our ships decline, we may be required to record  additional impairment
charges in our financial statements, in addition to the  impairment charge  recorded in the  year ended
December 31, 2020, which could adversely affect  our results of  operations. See ‘‘Item 5. Operating and
Financial Review and Prospects—B. Liquidity  and Capital  Resources—Critical Accounting Policies—
Impairment of Vessels’’. Deterioration  in  the market value  of  our ships may trigger  a breach  of some  of
the covenants contained in our credit facilities. If we do breach such  covenants and  we are  unable to
remedy the relevant breach, our lenders could accelerate our indebtedness and seek to foreclose  on the
ships in our fleet securing those credit  facilities. In addition, if a charter contract expires  or is
terminated by the customer, we may  be  unable to redeploy the affected ships at attractive rates and,
rather than continue to incur costs to  maintain and finance them, we may  seek to dispose of them. Any
foreclosure on our ships, or any disposal  by us  of a ship at a time when  ship  values have  fallen,  could
result in a loss and could materially and adversely  affect our  business, financial condition, results of
operations and cash flows, including cash  available  for  dividends to shareholders.

If we cannot meet our charterers’ quality and compliance  requirements, including  regulations or costs
associated with the environmental impact  of  our vessels,  we may not be  able to operate  our  vessels profitably
which could have an adverse effect on our  future performance, results  of operations, cash flows and financial
position.

Customers, and in particular those in  the LNG industry, have a high and increasing  focus on
quality, emissions and compliance standards  with their suppliers across the entire  value chain, including
the shipping and transportation segment.  There  is also increasing focus  on the  environmental footprint
of marine transportation. Our continuous compliance with  existing and  new  standards and  quality
requirements is vital for our operations.  Related  risks could  materialize in multiple ways, including a
sudden and unexpected breach in quality  and/or  compliance concerning one or more  vessels  and/or a
continuous decrease in the quality concerning one or more LNG carriers occurring  over time.
Moreover, continuously increasing requirements  from LNG industry constituents can further complicate
our  ability to meet the standards. Any  non-compliance by us, either suddenly or  over a period of time,
on one or more LNG carriers, or an  increase in requirements by our  charterers above  and beyond  what
we deliver, may have a material adverse effect on our future performance,  results of operations, cash
flows, financial position and our ability  to  pay cash dividends to our shareholders.

The LNG shipping industry is subject to substantial environmental and other regulations which may be
increased further by the growing global  focus  on a lower carbon economy,  the physical effects of climate
change and the increasing demand for environmental,  social and governance disclosures by  investors,  lenders
and regulators.

Our operations are materially affected by  extensive  and changing international,  national, state and

local environmental laws, regulations, treaties, conventions and  standards which are in  force in
international waters, or in the jurisdictional  waters  of  the countries in  which our ships operate and in
the countries in which our ships are  registered. These  requirements include  those relating to equipping
and operating ships, providing security  and minimizing or addressing impacts on the  environment from

21

ship operations. These requirements may introduce regulations which effect the operation profile of our
vessels and could impact our existing charters. We may incur substantial costs in complying with these
requirements, including costs for ship  modifications and changes in operating  procedures.  We also
could incur substantial costs, including  clean-up costs, civil and criminal  penalties and  sanctions, the
suspension or termination of operations and third party  claims as a result of violations  of,  or liabilities
under, such laws and regulations. The higher emissions  of our  Steam vessels relative  to  more modern
vessels could make it more difficult to  secure employment  for these vessels and reduce  the rates  at
which  we can charter these vessels to our customers.

In addition, these requirements can affect the  resale value or useful lives of our ships, require a
reduction in cargo capacity, operating  speed, necessitate  ship  modifications  or operational changes  or
restrictions or lead to decreased availability of insurance coverage for environmental matters. They
could further result in the denial of access  to  certain jurisdictional waters  or ports or detention in
certain ports. We are required to obtain  governmental approvals and permits  to  operate  our ships.
Delays in obtaining such governmental  approvals may  increase our expenses,  and the  terms and
conditions of such approvals could materially  and adversely affect our operations.

Additional laws, regulations, taxes or  levies may be adopted that could limit our ability to do
business or increase our operating costs, which could materially and adversely  affect our business. New
or amended legislation relating to ship  recycling, sewage systems,  emission control  (including emissions
of greenhouse gases and other pollutants)  as  well as ballast water treatment and ballast water handling
may be adopted. For example, the United States  has enacted  legislation, and  more recently a
convention adopted by the International  Maritime Organisation (the ‘‘IMO’’) has become effective,
governing ballast water management  systems on  oceangoing ships. The IMO has  also established
progressive standards limiting emissions from ships (ratified in the  MEPC75) starting from 2023
towards 2030 and 2050 goals. The EU  is  trying to incorporate shipping  within the carbon Emission
Trading Scheme already existing for other sectors.  These and other laws or  regulations may require
additional capital expenditures or operating expenses  (such as increased costs  for low  sulfur fuel or
pollution controls) in order for us to  maintain our ships’ compliance with international  and/or national
regulations. We may also become subject to additional laws and  regulations  if  we enter  new markets or
trades.

We  also believe that the heightened  environmental, quality and security concerns of insurance
underwriters, regulators and charterers  will  generally  lead to  additional regulatory requirements and/or
contractual requirements, including enhanced risk assessment  and  security requirements,  as well as
greater inspection and safety requirements on  all LNG carriers in the marine transportation  market.
These requirements are likely to add incremental  costs to our operations, and  the failure to comply
with these requirements may affect the ability of our ships to obtain and, possibly, recover  from,
insurance policies or to obtain the required certificates  for entry into the different ports where we
operate.

Some environmental laws and regulations, such as the  U.S.  Oil  Pollution Act of 1990, or  ‘‘OPA’’,
provide for potentially unlimited joint, several and/or strict liability for owners, operators and demise or
bareboat charterers for oil pollution  and  related damages. OPA applies to discharges of any oil  from a
ship in U.S. waters, including discharges  of  fuel  and  lubricants from an  LNG carrier, even if the ships
do not carry oil as cargo. In addition,  many  states in the United States  bordering  a navigable waterway
have enacted legislation providing for potentially unlimited  strict liability without  regard to fault  for the
discharge of pollutants within their waters.  We also are subject to other laws and conventions  outside
the United States that provide for an  owner or operator  of  LNG  carriers  to  bear strict liability for
pollution, such as the Convention on  Limitation of  Liability  for Maritime Claims of 1976,  or the
‘‘London Convention’’.

22

Some of  these laws and conventions, including OPA and the London Convention,  may include
limitations on liability. However, the  limitations may not be applicable in certain  circumstances, such as
where  a spill is caused by a ship owner’s or operator’s intentional or reckless conduct. These limitations
are also subject to periodic updates and may otherwise be  amended in the  future.

Compliance with OPA and other environmental  laws and regulations  also may result  in ship

owners and operators incurring increased costs for  additional  maintenance and  inspection requirements,
the development of contingency arrangements  for potential spills, obtaining  mandated insurance
coverage and meeting financial responsibility requirements.

Increased concern over climate change could lead to a more  negative perception of the oil and  gas

industry which could impact our ability  to  attract  investors,  access financing  in the bank and capital
markets and attract and retain talent.

Further technological advancements and other  innovations  affecting  LNG carriers could reduce the charter
hire rates we are able to obtain when seeking new  employment for existing or newbuild vessels and this could
adversely impact the value of our assets and  our results of operations  and  cash flows.

The charter rates, asset value and operational life  of  an LNG  carrier are determined  by  a number
of factors, including the ship’s efficiency,  operational flexibility and  physical life.  Efficiency  is reflected
in unit freight costs (‘‘UFC’’) which are  driven by the size of the vessel,  its fuel economy and  the rate
at which LNG in the cargo tanks naturally evaporates (‘‘boil-off ratio’’ or ‘‘BOR’’). Flexibility is
primarily driven by the size of the ship and includes the  ability to enter harbors, utilize  related docking
facilities and pass through canals and  straits. Physical  life is related to the original design and
construction, the ongoing maintenance  and the impact of operational stresses on  the asset. Ship,  cargo
containment and engine designs are  continually  evolving. At such  time as  newer designs are developed
and accepted in the market, these newer  vessels may be more efficient or more flexible or  have longer
physical lives than our ships. Competition from these more  technologically advanced LNG carriers
compared to our vessels with older technology could adversely  affect our ability to charter or re-charter
our  ships  and the charter hire rates we  will  be  able  to  secure when we seek to charter or re-charter  our
ships, and could also reduce the resale  value of our  ships.  This could adversely  affect our revenues  and
cash flows, including cash available for  dividends  to  our  shareholders,  as well  as our ability to obtain
debt financing for ships with older technology whose market  values have experienced  a significant
decline.

Our future performance and ability to secure future employment for our  vessels depends  on continued growth
in  LNG production and demand for LNG and LNG shipping.

Our future performance, including our ability  to  strengthen our  balance  sheet and to profitably
employ and expand our fleet, will depend  on continued growth in LNG supply and  demand, and  the
demand for shipping. A complete LNG  project includes natural gas production, liquefaction, storage,
regasification and distribution facilities, in  addition to marine transportation of LNG. Growth  in LNG
demand and increased infrastructure  investment  has led to an expansion of LNG  production  capacity in
recent years, but material delays in the construction or slower than  expected ramp-up of new
liquefaction facilities could constrain  the amount of LNG  available for shipping, reducing ship
utilization. The rate of growth of the LNG industry has fluctuated due to several  factors, including the
rate of global economic growth, fluctuations in global  commodity  prices, including natural  gas, oil  and
coal as well as other sources of energy,  and energy and environmental policy in markets which produce

23

and/or consume LNG. Continued growth in LNG production  and demand  for LNG and  LNG shipping
could be negatively affected by a number  of factors,  including:

(cid:127) prices for crude oil, petroleum products, natural gas. Extremely low natural  gas prices  globally,

as experienced in 2020, may limit the willingness and ability  of  developers of new  LNG
infrastructure projects to approve the development of such new projects;

(cid:127) the cost of natural gas derived from  LNG relative to the cost of natural  gas generally and to the
cost of alternative fuels, including renewables,  and the  impact of  increases in  the cost of natural
gas derived from LNG on consumption of  LNG;

(cid:127) increases in the production levels of  lower cost  natural  gas  in domestic natural gas consuming
markets, which could further depress prices  for natural gas in those markets  and make LNG
uneconomical;

(cid:127) increases in the production of natural gas in  areas linked by  pipelines to consuming areas, or the
extension of existing pipelines, or the  development of new  pipeline systems in  markets  we may
serve;

(cid:127) infrastructure constraints such as delays  in the construction of liquefaction facilities or

regasification facilities, the inability of project owners or operators to obtain governmental
approvals to construct or operate LNG  facilities,  as well  as community or  political action group
resistance to new LNG infrastructure  due  to  concerns about the environment, safety and
terrorism;

(cid:127) concerns regarding the spread of disease,  for example, the COVID-19 virus, safety  and

terrorism;

(cid:127) changes in weather patterns leading to warmer  winters  in the northern hemisphere and  lower

gas demand in the traditional peak heating season;

(cid:127) the availability and allocation of capital  by  developers to  new LNG projects, especially  the major

oil and  gas companies and other leading participants in the  LNG industry;

(cid:127) increases in interest rates, capital market  volatility,  changes in  bank regulations or  other events

that may affect the availability of sufficient financing for LNG  projects  on commercially
reasonable terms;

(cid:127) negative global or regional economic  or political  conditions, particularly in LNG consuming

regions which could reduce energy consumption or  its  growth;

(cid:127) new taxes or regulations affecting LNG production or liquefaction that make LNG production

less  attractive;

(cid:127) labor or political unrest or military  conflicts affecting  existing or proposed areas of  LNG

production, regasification or consumption;

(cid:127) any significant explosion, spill or other incident  involving an  LNG facility or carrier;  or

(cid:127) regional, national or international energy policies that constrain the  production or  consumption

of hydrocarbons including natural gas.

In recent years, global natural gas and  crude  oil prices  have been volatile. Any decline in  oil prices
can depress natural gas prices and lead to a narrowing of the difference in pricing between geographic
regions, which can adversely affect the  length of  voyages in the spot LNG shipping market  and the  spot
rates and medium-term charter rates  for charters  which commence  in the near  future.

24

A continuation of the recent volatility in  natural  gas and oil prices may adversely affect  our  growth prospects
and results of operations.

Natural gas prices are volatile as demonstrated by 2020  with multi-year lows prior to a strong
recovery in late 2020 in certain geographic areas.  Natural  gas  prices are affected by numerous factors
beyond our control, including but not  limited to the  following:

(cid:127) price and availability of crude oil, petroleum products  and coal;

(cid:127) worldwide and regional supply of, demand  for and price  of natural gas;

(cid:127) the cost of exploration, development,  production,  transportation and distribution of  natural gas;

(cid:127) expectations regarding future energy prices for both natural gas and other sources of  energy,

including renewable energy sources and coal;

(cid:127) the level of worldwide LNG production and exports;

(cid:127) government laws and regulations, including  but not limited to environmental  protection laws and

regulations;

(cid:127) local and international political, economic  and weather  conditions;

(cid:127) political and military conflicts; and

(cid:127) the availability and cost of alternative  energy sources, including coal  and  alternate sources of

natural gas in gas importing and consuming countries.

Given the significant global natural gas  and crude oil price volatility referenced above, and with
eight vessels operating in the short-term  spot market under contracts of up to six months  and seven
vessels scheduled to come off charter  during  2021 and 2022, a  continuation of the  low natural gas
prices or oil prices seen in 2020 may adversely affect our future  business,  results of operations and
financial condition and our ability to  make  cash distributions,  as a  result of, among other things:

(cid:127) a reduction in exploration for or development of new natural gas reserves  or projects, or the
delay or cancellation of existing projects as energy companies  lower  their  capital expenditures
budgets, which may reduce our growth opportunities;

(cid:127) low oil prices negatively affecting the market price of natural  gas, to the  extent that natural gas
prices are benchmarked to the price of crude oil, in turn negatively affecting  the economics  of
potential new LNG production projects,  which may  reduce our growth opportunities;

(cid:127) high oil prices negatively affecting the  competitiveness of natural gas  to the extent that natural

gas prices are linked to the price of crude  oil;

(cid:127) low gas prices globally and/or weak differentials between prices in the Atlantic  Basin and  the
Pacific Basin leading to reduced inter-basin trading  of LNG  and reduced demand for LNG
shipping;

(cid:127) lower demand for vessels of the types we  own and operate, which  may reduce available charter

rates and revenue to us upon redeployment of our vessels following expiration  or termination  of
existing contracts or upon the initial chartering of vessels;

(cid:127) customers potentially seeking to renegotiate or terminate existing  vessel contracts, or failing to

extend or renew contracts upon expiration;

(cid:127) the inability or refusal of customers to make charter payments to us  due to financial constraints

or otherwise; or

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(cid:127) declines in vessel values, which may result in  losses to us upon  vessel sales or  impairment

charges against our earnings and could  impact  compliance with  covenants in  loan
documentation.

Changes in global and regional economic conditions  and  capital  markets  volatility could adversely impact our
business, financial condition, results of  operations and cash flows.

Weak global or regional economic conditions may negatively impact  our business, financial

condition, results of operations and cash  flows, including cash  available for  dividends  to  our
shareholders in ways that we cannot  predict. Our ability to expand our fleet beyond our contracted
newbuildings will be dependent on our  ability  to  obtain financing to fund the  acquisition  of  additional
ships. In addition, uncertainty about current  and future global  economic conditions may  cause  our
customers to defer projects in response  to tighter credit, decreased capital availability and declining
customer confidence, may negatively  impact  the demand for  our ships and  services and  could  also
result in defaults under our current charters. Global financial markets and economic  conditions have
been volatile in recent years and remain subject to significant vulnerabilities,  such as the  continuing
COVID-19 pandemic. A further tightening of the credit markets may negatively impact our  operations
by affecting the solvency of our suppliers or customers, which could  lead to disruptions  in delivery of
supplies such as equipment for conversions, cost  increases for supplies, accelerated payments to
suppliers, customer bad debts or reduced revenues. Similarly, such market conditions could affect
lenders participating in our financing  agreements, making  them unable to fulfill their commitments and
obligations to us. Any reductions in activity  owing to such  conditions  or failure  by  our customers,
suppliers or lenders to meet their contractual obligations to us could adversely  affect our business,
financial position, results of operations  and cash flows,  including  cash available for dividends to our
shareholders.

GasLog LNG Services, our vessels’ management company, and  a substantial number  of its  staff,

including our Senior Management team, are located in Greece. A return of economic instability in
Greece could disrupt our operations and  have  an adverse effect  on our business. We have sought to
minimize this risk and preserve operational stability by carefully  developing staff deployment plans,  an
information technology recovery site, an  alternative ship-to-shore  communications plan and funding
mechanisms outside of Greece. While we  believe these  plans, combined with  the international nature of
our  operations, will mitigate the impact  of any disruption of operations in Greece, we cannot assure
you that  these plans will be effective  in  all circumstances.

GasLog has an office in England and our  vessels  may  visit ports within the United Kingdom.  The
United Kingdom exited the European Union on  January 31,  2020 and entered a transition period from
February 1, 2020 to December 31, 2020 during which  European  Union Law still applied. On
December 24, 2020, the United Kingdom reached  a trade agreement with the European Union.  While
the trade agreement did not impose  any  new  tariffs or quotas on  goods, there is a risk that the
disruption of free movement between the  United Kingdom and the European Union could result in
disruption of the exchange of people and services,  and  ultimately, our operations.

Compliance with safety and other requirements imposed by  classification societies  may be  very  costly  and  may
adversely affect our business.

The hull and machinery of every commercial  LNG carrier must  be  certified by a  classification
society. The classification society certifies that  the ship  has been  built and subsequently  maintained  in
accordance with the applicable rules  and regulations of that  classification  society. Moreover,  every  ship
must comply with all applicable international  conventions and the regulations of the  ship’s  flag state as
verified by a classification society. Finally, each ship must successfully  undergo  periodic  surveys,
including annual, intermediate and special  surveys performed under the  classification society’s rules.

26

If any ship does not maintain its class, it will lose its  insurance coverage and be unable  to  trade,

and the ship’s owner will be in breach  of  relevant  covenants under its financing arrangements and
potentially its charter contracts. Failure  to  maintain  the class of one or more of  our ships  could  have a
material adverse effect on our business, financial condition, results  of  operations and cash flows,
including cash available for dividends to our  shareholders.

Climate change and greenhouse gas restrictions may adversely impact our  operations and markets.

Due to concern over the risks of climate  change, a number of  countries  and the  IMO,  have
adopted, or are considering the adoption of,  regulatory frameworks to reduce greenhouse gas  emission
from ships. These regulatory measures  may  include the adoption of cap and  trade regimes, carbon
taxes, increased efficiency standards and  incentives  or mandates for  renewable energy.  Although
emissions of greenhouse gases from international shipping currently  are  not subject to agreements
under the United Nations Framework  Convention  on Climate Change,  such as the  ‘‘Kyoto  Protocol’’
and the ‘‘Paris Agreement’’, a new treaty  may be adopted in the future that includes additional
restrictions on shipping emissions to  those already adopted under  the International  Convention for the
Prevention of Marine Pollution from  Ships, or the ‘‘MARPOL  Convention’’. Compliance with  future
changes in laws and regulations relating to climate change  could increase the costs of operating and
maintaining our ships and could require  us to install new emission  controls, as well as acquire
allowances, pay taxes related to our greenhouse gas emissions  or  administer  and manage a  greenhouse
gas emissions program. Revenue generation  and strategic growth  opportunities may also  be  adversely
affected.

There is  increasing focus on the environmental footprint  of  the energy  and  transportation sectors

from governments, regulators, shareholders,  customers, environmental  pressure groups and other
stakeholders. This has been manifested recently  by Shell’s commitment to base executive remuneration
in part on the achievement of specific carbon emissions targets, covering all of its activities  and
products and those of its suppliers. GasLog’s vessels on charter to Shell and other energy companies
form part of their supply chain and are  likely to be captured  within these targets. In addition, many
large financial institutions are under  pressure both to reduce their own  environmental footprints and to
monitor the environmental footprints of  the companies and projects to which  they lend.  While  LNG is
among the cleanest marine transportation  fuels,  and  while there are no  legally  binding  obligations on
GasLog or its peers to reduce emissions  today, the  focus and pressure  on the environmental footprint
of the marine transportation sector is  likely  to  remain  high and  may increase. Any specific
requirements imposed on GasLog by regulators, governments,  customers  or other stakeholders  may
impact the useful life of our vessels, increase  our operating costs  or  require us to undertake significant
investments in our vessels which may  reduce  our revenues, profits and cash flows  and may  impact  our
ability to pay dividends to our shareholders.

Adverse effects upon the oil and gas industry relating to climate change, including growing public

concern about the environmental impact of climate change, may  also  have an  effect  on demand  for our
services. For example, increased regulation of greenhouse  gases or other concerns  relating to climate
change may reduce the demand for oil and natural gas in the future or create greater  incentives for use
of alternative energy sources. Any long-term  material adverse  effect on the oil  and gas  industry could
have significant and unpredictable financial  and  operational adverse impacts on our  business.

We operate our ships worldwide, which  could  expose us  to political, governmental and economic instability
that could harm our business.

Because we operate our ships in the geographic areas where  our customers do business, our
operations may be affected by political, governmental and economic conditions in the  countries where
our  ships  operate or where they are  registered. Any disruption caused by  these  factors could harm our
business, financial condition, results of operations and cash flows,  including  cash available for payment

27

of dividends to shareholders. In particular, our ships frequent LNG terminals  in countries including
Egypt, Nigeria, Equatorial Guinea and  Trinidad,  as well as  transit through the Gulf  of  Aden  and the
Strait of Hormuz. Future hostilities or other political instability in the geographic regions where  we
operate or may operate could have a material adverse effect on our  business, financial  condition,
results of operations and cash flows,  including  cash available for payment of dividends to shareholders.
General trade tensions between the U.S.  and  China escalated in 2018,  with three  rounds of U.S. tariffs
on Chinese goods taking effect in 2018  and a further round taking effect in  September 2019, each
followed by a round of retaliatory Chinese  tariffs on U.S. goods. Despite  a phase one trade  deal  being
signed in January 2020, tensions continue  to  exist. Our  business  could be harmed by trade tariffs,  as
well as any trade embargoes or other economic  sanctions by the United States or other countries
against countries in the Middle East,  Asia, Russia or elsewhere as  a result  of terrorist  attacks,  hostilities
or diplomatic or political pressures that limit trading activities  with those countries.

Terrorist attacks, international hostilities,  political change  and  piracy could adversely affect our business,
financial condition, results of operations and cash  flows.

Terrorist attacks, piracy and the current conflicts in  the Middle East and elsewhere, as well  as
other current and future conflicts and  political  change, may adversely  affect our business, financial
condition, results of operations and cash  flows, including cash  available for  dividends  to  our
shareholders. The continuing hostilities in  the Middle East may lead to additional acts  of  terrorism,
further regional conflicts, other armed actions around the world  and civil disturbance in the United
States or elsewhere, which may contribute to further instability  in the  global financial markets. These
uncertainties could also adversely affect our ability to obtain additional financing on  terms acceptable
to us, or at all.

In the past, political conflicts have also  resulted in  attacks  on ships, mining of waterways and other

efforts to disrupt international shipping, particularly in the Arabian Gulf region  and West  Africa.  Acts
of terrorism and piracy have also affected ships trading in  regions such as the  South China  Sea and  the
Gulf of Aden. Any terrorist attacks targeted  at ships may in the future have a  material  negative  affect
on our business, financial condition, results of operations and cash  flows and could directly impact our
ships or our customers.

We  currently employ armed guards onboard certain vessels operating in areas  that  may be prone

to hijacking or terrorist attacks. The presence of armed guards may increase the  risk of damage, injury
or loss of life in connection with any  attacks on our vessels, in  addition  to  increasing crew costs.

We  may not be adequately insured to cover  losses from acts of terrorism,  piracy, regional conflicts

and other armed actions, including losses relating to the employment of armed  guards.

LNG facilities, shipyards, ships, pipelines and gas fields could be targets of future terrorist  attacks

or piracy. Any such attacks could lead  to,  among other things,  bodily  injury or  loss of  life, as well  as
damage  to the ships or other property, increased ship operating  costs, including insurance costs,
reductions in the supply of LNG and the  inability to transport  LNG  to  or from certain  locations.
Terrorist attacks, war or other events  beyond our control that adversely affect the production, storage
or transportation of LNG to be shipped by  us could  entitle our customers  to  terminate  our  charter
contracts in certain circumstances, which  would harm our cash  flows and our business.

Terrorist attacks, or the perception that  LNG facilities and LNG carriers are potential terrorist
targets, could materially and adversely  affect expansion  of LNG  infrastructure and the continued supply
of LNG. Concern that LNG facilities  may  be  targeted for  attack by terrorists has contributed
significantly to local community and  environmental group  resistance to the  construction of  a number  of
LNG facilities, primarily in North America.  If a terrorist incident  involving an LNG facility  or LNG
carrier did occur, in addition to the possible effects identified  in the previous paragraph, the incident

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may adversely affect the construction of additional  LNG facilities and could lead to the temporary  or
permanent closing of various LNG facilities currently in  operation.

In the future, the ships we own or manage could be required to  call at ports located in countries that are
subject to restrictions imposed by the United States and  other governments.

The United States and other governments and their agencies  impose sanctions and embargoes on

certain countries and maintain lists of  countries they consider to be state  sponsors  of terrorism. For
example, in 2010, the United States enacted the Comprehensive Iran  Sanctions  Accountability  and
Divestment Act, or ‘‘CISADA’’, which  expanded the scope of the  former Iran Sanctions Act. Among
other things, CISADA expanded the  application of the  prohibitions imposed by the U.S. government to
non-U.S.  companies, such as GasLog,  and  limits the ability of companies  and persons to do business or
trade with Iran when such activities relate to the investment,  supply or export of refined petroleum or
petroleum products, as well as LNG.

In 2012, President Obama signed Executive Order 13608, which prohibits foreign persons from
violating, or attempting to violate, or causing a violation of, any sanctions in  effect against Iran, or
facilitating any deceptive transactions  for  or on  behalf of any  person subject  to  U.S. sanctions. The
Secretary of the Treasury may prohibit  any transactions  or dealings, including any U.S.  capital markets
financing, involving any person found  to  be in violation of Executive Order 13608. Also  in 2012, the
U.S. enacted the Iran Threat Reduction and Syria  Human Rights Act of 2012, or the  ‘‘ITRA’’, which
created new sanctions and strengthened existing sanctions. Among  other things, the ITRA intensifies
existing sanctions regarding the provision of  goods, services, infrastructure or technology  to  Iran’s
petroleum or petrochemical sector. The ITRA also  includes a provision requiring  the President of the
United States to impose five or more  sanctions from Section 6(a) of the Iran Sanctions  Act,  as
amended, on a person the President  determines is  a controlling beneficial owner of, or otherwise owns,
operates, or controls or insures a vessel that  was  used  to  transport  crude  oil from  Iran to another
country and (1) if the person is a controlling beneficial owner of the vessel, the person had  actual
knowledge the vessel was so used or  (2) if the  person otherwise owns, operates, or controls,  or insures
the vessel, the person knew or should have known  the vessel was so used.  Such  a person could be
subject to a variety of sanctions, including  exclusion from U.S. capital markets, exclusion from  financial
transactions subject to U.S. jurisdiction, and exclusion of such person’s vessels  from U.S.  ports for  up to
two years. The ITRA also includes a  requirement that issuers of securities must disclose  to  the SEC in
their annual and quarterly reports filed  after February 6,  2013 whether  the  issuer or ‘‘any affiliate’’ has
‘‘knowingly’’ engaged in certain sanctioned activities involving Iran  during  the timeframe  covered by the
report. Finally, in January 2013, the U.S.  enacted the Iran Freedom and Counter-Proliferation Act of
2012 or the ‘‘IFCA’’, which expanded  the scope of  U.S. sanctions on any person  that  is part of Iran’s
energy, shipping or shipbuilding sector and operators of ports in  Iran, and imposes penalties  on any
person who facilitates or otherwise knowingly provides  significant financial, material or  other support to
these entities.

On January 16, 2016, the United States suspended  certain sanctions against Iran applicable to
non-U.S.  companies, such as us, pursuant to the nuclear  agreement reached between Iran, China,
France, Germany, Russia, the United  Kingdom, the United States and the European  Union. To
implement these changes, beginning on  January 16, 2016,  the United States waived enforcement of
many  of the sanctions against Iran’s energy  and  petrochemical  sectors  described above,  among  other
things, including certain provisions of  CISADA, ITRA,  and IFCA. In May 2018, President  Trump
announced the withdrawal of the U.S. from the Joint Comprehensive  Plan  of  Action and almost  all  the
U.S. sanctions waived and lifted in January 2016 were  reinstated in August  2018 and  November 2018,
respectively.

Although the ships we own have not  called  on ports in countries subject to sanctions or embargoes
or in countries identified as state sponsors of terrorism,  including Iran, North  Korea and Syria, we  can

29

give no assurance that these ships will  not call on ports  in these countries in the  future. While we
intend to maintain compliance with all  sanctions and embargoes  applicable  to  us, U.S.  and international
sanctions and embargo laws and regulations  do not necessarily apply to the same countries or proscribe
the same activities, which may make compliance difficult. Additionally, the scope of certain  laws  may be
unclear, and these laws may be subject  to  changing interpretations and application and may be
amended or strengthened from time  to  time, including by adding or removing countries  from the
proscribed lists. Violations of sanctions and embargo laws and regulations could result in  fines or other
penalties and could result in some investors deciding, or being required, to divest  their investment,  or
not to invest, in us.

Failure to comply with the U.S. Foreign  Corrupt Practices  Act,  the UK  Bribery  Act and other anti-bribery
legislation in other jurisdictions could result in  fines, criminal penalties, contract terminations and an adverse
effect on our business.

We  operate our ships worldwide, requiring our ships to trade in  countries known to have a

reputation for corruption. We are committed to doing business in accordance  with applicable
anti-corruption laws and have adopted a code of business conduct and ethics which is consistently
applied  and in full compliance with the U.S. Foreign Corrupt  Practices Act of  1977, or the ‘‘FCPA’’,
and the Bribery Act 2010 of the United Kingdom or the  ‘‘UK Bribery Act’’. We are subject, however,
to the risk that we, our affiliated entities  or  our  or their  respective officers,  directors, employees and
agents may take actions determined to  be  in violation of such anti-corruption  laws,  including the  FCPA
and the UK Bribery Act. Any such violation could result  in substantial fines,  sanctions, civil and/or
criminal penalties, or curtailment of operations in certain jurisdictions, and might adversely  affect our
business, financial condition, results of operations and cash flows,  including  cash available for dividends
to our shareholders. In addition, actual  or  alleged violations could  damage our reputation  and ability to
do business. Furthermore, detecting,  investigating, and resolving actual  or alleged violations is  expensive
and can consume significant senior management time  and attention.

Changing laws and evolving reporting requirements could  have  an adverse  effect on  our  business.

Changing laws, regulations and standards relating to reporting requirements may create additional

compliance requirements for us. To maintain high  standards  of corporate governance and  public
disclosure, GasLog has invested in, and intends to continue to invest in, reasonably necessary resources
to comply with evolving standards.

The European Union Code of Conduct Group has assessed the  tax  policies of a  range of countries

including Bermuda, where our vessel  owning entities are incorporated. Bermuda was included in  a list
of jurisdictions which are required to address the  European  Union Code  of Conduct Group’s  concerns
in respect of ‘economic substance’. Bermuda,  along with  the British Virgin Islands, the  Cayman Islands,
Guernsey, Bailiwick of Jersey and the  Isle of  Man, has committed  to  comply with  the European  Union
Code of Conduct Group’s requirements  on  economic substance  and has passed legislation in  the form
of the Economic Substance Act 2018 (the ‘‘ESA’’). Currently,  there  is uncertainty surrounding  the
interpretation of the ESA and the relevant regulations as the  Bermuda  government, along  with the
respective governments of the other  jurisdictions  referenced  above, remain  in discussions  with the
European Union Code of Conduct Group.

GasLog has filed the required returns  confirming  we have  appropriate economic substance in
Bermuda. However, it is not possible to accurately predict the outcome of any  review by the authorities
as to whether or not GasLog and its  business has accurately  interpreted  the requirements.  Whilst  we
believe we have taken appropriate advice  and counsel from the  relevant authorities  and external  legal
advisors, the requirements may increase  the complexity and  costs  of  carrying on  GasLog’s business with
entities incorporated in Bermuda.

30

Our insurance may be insufficient to cover losses  that may occur to our property or  result from our
operations which could adversely affect our results  of operations and cash flows.

The operation of any ship includes risks such as  mechanical failure, personal injury, collision, fire,
contact with floating objects, property loss  or damage, cargo loss  or damage  and business interruption
due to a number of reasons, including  political circumstances in  foreign countries, hostilities and labor
strikes. In addition, there is always an inherent possibility of a marine disaster, including collision,
explosion, spills and other environmental mishaps, and other liabilities  arising  from owning, operating
or managing ships in international trade.  Although we carry protection and indemnity, hull  and
machinery, loss of hire and cyber risk  insurance  covering our  ships consistent  with industry standards,
we can give no assurance that we are adequately  insured  against all risks or that our insurers will pay a
particular claim. In addition, we may be unable to insure against  certain cyber  events that may disrupt
our  information and operational technology systems.  We also  may  be  unable to procure adequate
insurance coverage at commercially reasonable  rates  in the future. Even  if our insurance coverage is
adequate to cover our losses, we may not  be able to obtain a  timely  replacement ship in the event of a
loss of a ship. Any uninsured or underinsured  loss could harm our business, financial condition, results
of operations and  cash flows, including cash  available for  dividends  to  shareholders.

In addition, some of our insurance coverage is maintained  through mutual protection and

indemnity associations, and, as a member  of such associations, we  may  be required  to  make additional
payments over and above budgeted premiums if member claims exceed  association  reserves.

Reliability of suppliers may limit our ability  to obtain  supplies and  services  when needed.

We  rely, and will in the future rely, on  a significant  supply of consumables,  spare  parts  and

equipment to operate, maintain, repair  and  upgrade  our fleet of ships. Delays in  delivery or
unavailability of supplies could result in  off-hire  days due to consequent delays  in the repair and
maintenance of our fleet. This would negatively impact our revenues and cash  flows. Cost increases
could also negatively impact our future  operations, although  the impact of significant  cost increases
may be mitigated to some extent with respect to the  vessels  that are employed  under charter contracts
with automatic periodic adjustment provisions or cost review provisions.

Governments could requisition our ships  during a  period  of  war  or emergency,  resulting in loss  of  earnings.

The government of a jurisdiction where one or more of our ships are registered  could  requisition
for title or seize our ships. Requisition  for  title occurs when  a  government  takes  control  of a ship and
becomes its owner. Also, a government  could  requisition our ships for hire.  Requisition  for hire occurs
when a government takes control of  a  ship and  effectively  becomes the charterer at dictated  charter
rates. Generally, requisitions occur during  a period  of  war  or  emergency, although governments may
elect to requisition ships in other circumstances.  Although we  would expect to be entitled to
government compensation in the event  of  a requisition of one or more  of our ships, the amount and
timing of  payments, if any, would be uncertain.  A government requisition of one or more  of  our  ships
would result in off-hire days under our  time charters, may  cause us to breach covenants  in certain of
our  credit facilities and could have a  material adverse effect on our business,  financial  condition,  results
of operations and  cash flows, including cash  available for  dividends  to  our shareholders.

Maritime claimants could arrest our ships,  which could interrupt  our cash flows.

Crew members, suppliers of goods and services to a  ship,  shippers or  receivers  of  cargo and other

parties may be entitled to a maritime  lien  against a  ship  for  unsatisfied  debts, claims or  damages. In
many  jurisdictions, a maritime lienholder  may enforce its lien by arresting a  ship.  The arrest or
attachment of one or more of our ships  which is not  timely  discharged could  cause us  to  default on a
charter or breach covenants in certain  of  our credit facilities and, to the extent such arrest or

31

attachment is not covered by our protection and indemnity insurance, could require  us  to  pay large
sums of money to have the arrest or  attachment lifted. Any of these occurrences  could  have a material
adverse effect on our business, financial  condition,  results of operations  and cash flows, including  cash
available for dividends to our shareholders.

Additionally, in some jurisdictions, such as the  Republic of South Africa, under the ‘‘sister ship’’
theory of liability, a claimant may arrest both the ship that  is subject to the claimant’s maritime  lien
and any ‘‘associated’’ ship, which is any ship owned or controlled by  the same  owner. Claimants  could
try to assert ‘‘sister ship’’ liability against  one ship in our  fleet for claims relating  to  another  of  our
ships.

We may  be subject to litigation that could  have an adverse effect on us.

We  may in the future be involved from  time to time in litigation  matters. These matters may

include, among other things, contract  disputes, personal  injury  claims, environmental claims or
proceedings, toxic tort claims, employment  matters and governmental  claims for taxes or duties, as well
as other litigation that arises in the ordinary  course of our  business.  We cannot predict with  certainty
the outcome of any claim or other litigation matter. The ultimate outcome  of  any litigation  matter and
the potential costs associated with prosecuting or defending  such lawsuits, including the diversion of
management’s attention to these matters,  could have  an adverse effect on us and, in the event  of
litigation that could reasonably be expected  to  have a material adverse  effect  on us, could lead  to  an
event of default under certain of our credit  facilities.

Risks Inherent in an Investment in GasLog

Due to our lack of diversification, adverse  developments in the LNG market and/or in the LNG transportation
industry could adversely affect our business,  particularly if  such developments occur  at  a time when we are
seeking new charters for our vessels.

We  rely  exclusively on the cash flow  generated from charters for our LNG  vessels  and

management of third party LNG vessels.  Due to our  lack of diversification, an  adverse  development in
the LNG market and/or the LNG transportation industry could  have a significantly greater impact on
our  business, particularly if such developments  occur at a time when our ships are not under charter  or
nearing the end of their charters, than  if we maintained more diverse assets or lines of businesses.

Our contracts for the two newbuildings  we  have on order as of March 1, 2021 are subject to  risks that  could
cause delays in the delivery of the ships, which could adversely affect our  results  of operations and cash flows.

Our two contracted newbuildings are scheduled to be delivered to us during 2021.  Significant
delays in the delivery of one or both  of these ships, would  delay our receipt of revenues under the
related time charters. For prolonged delays,  the customer  may terminate  the charter and, in addition to
the resulting loss of revenues, we may  be  responsible for additional substantial liquidated damages,
which  could adversely affect our business, financial condition, results  of operations and  cash flows,
including cash available for dividends to our  shareholders. In addition, the delivery  of  any of  these
ships with substantial defects or unexpected operational  problems could have similar consequences.

The completion and delivery of newbuildings or conversions could be delayed because of:

(cid:127) quality or engineering problems;

(cid:127) changes in governmental regulations or  maritime  self-regulatory organization standards;

(cid:127) work stoppages or other labor disturbances at the shipyard;

(cid:127) bankruptcy or other financial crisis of the shipbuilder;

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(cid:127) a backlog of orders at the shipyard;

(cid:127) political or economic disturbances;

(cid:127) weather interference or a catastrophic  event, such  as a major  earthquake or  fire;

(cid:127) accidents, diseases or pandemics, including the COVID-19 virus;

(cid:127) requests for changes to the original vessel specifications;

(cid:127) shortages of or delays in the receipt of necessary construction materials, such as steel;

(cid:127) the inability to finance the construction or conversion  of the vessels; or

(cid:127) the inability to obtain requisite permits or approvals.

If delivery of a vessel is materially delayed, it could adversely affect our  business, financial

condition, results of operations and cash  flows, including cash  available for  dividends  to  our
shareholders.

As  we take delivery of our newbuildings or  any secondhand  ships we acquire in the future, we will need to
expand our staff and crew. If we cannot recruit and retain employees and provide adequate compensation,  our
business, financial condition, results of  operations and cash flows  may  be adversely affected.

Our ability to acquire and retain customers depends on a number of factors, including  our ability
to staff our vessels with masters, officers  and  crews  of  suitable experience  in operating  LNG carriers.
As we take delivery of our newbuildings  or any secondhand ships  we acquire  in the future, we expect to
hire a significant number of seafarers  qualified  to  staff and  operate our  new vessels, as  well as
additional shoreside personnel. As the global LNG  carrier fleet continues to grow, we expect the
demand for technically skilled and experienced  officers and  crew to increase. This could lead to an
industry-wide shortfall of qualified personnel, resulting  in increased crew  costs, which could constrain
our  ability to recruit suitable employees  to  operate our  LNG carriers  within our budget parameters.

Material increases in crew costs could  adversely affect  our business, financial condition,  results of

operations and cash flows, including cash  available  for  dividends to our  shareholders.  In  addition, if we
cannot recruit and retain sufficient numbers of quality on-board seafaring personnel, we  may not be
able to fully utilize our expanded fleet,  which could  have a material adverse  effect on our business,
financial condition, results of operations and cash flows, including cash  available  for dividends to our
shareholders.

We may  have difficulty further expanding our fleet  in  the future.

We  may expand our fleet beyond our  contracted newbuildings  by ordering additional newbuildings

or by making selective acquisitions of  high-quality secondhand vessels to the extent that they are
available in the same way that we acquired the GasLog Chelsea and the eight vessels acquired from
MSL in 2014 and 2015. Our future growth will depend on  numerous factors, some  of which are  beyond
our  control, including our ability to:

(cid:127) identify attractive ship acquisition  opportunities and consummate such acquisitions;

(cid:127) obtain newbuilding contracts at acceptable  prices;

(cid:127) obtain required equity and debt financing  on acceptable terms;

(cid:127) secure charter arrangements on terms acceptable to us and  to  our lenders;

(cid:127) recruit and retain additional suitably qualified  and experienced seafarers and shore-based

employees;

33

(cid:127) continue to meet technical and safety performance standards;

(cid:127) manage joint ventures; and

(cid:127) manage the expansion of our operations to integrate the new ships  into  our  fleet.

We  may not be successful in executing any future  growth plans, and we cannot  give any assurances

that we will not incur significant expenses  and  losses  in connection  with such  growth efforts.

Our credit facilities are secured by our ships and contain payment  obligations  and  restrictive  covenants that
may restrict our business and financing activities as well as  our  ability to  pay dividends. A  failure by  us to
meet our obligations under our credit facilities could result in an event of  default under  such  credit  facilities
and foreclosure on our ships.

Our credit facilities impose, and any future  credit facility we enter  into will impose,  operating and
financial restrictions on us and our subsidiaries. These  restrictions in our  credit  facilities  generally  limit
our  shipowning subsidiaries’ ability to,  among  other  things:

(cid:127) incur additional indebtedness, create  liens or  provide guarantees;

(cid:127) provide any form of credit or financial  assistance to, or  enter into any  non-arms’ length

transactions with, us or any of our affiliates;

(cid:127) sell or  otherwise dispose of assets,  including our  ships;

(cid:127) engage in merger transactions;

(cid:127) terminate any charter;

(cid:127) amend our shipbuilding contracts;

(cid:127) change the manager of our ships;

(cid:127) undergo a change in ownership; or

(cid:127) acquire assets, make investments or enter  into  any joint venture arrangements  outside of  the

ordinary course of business.

Our credit facilities also impose certain restrictions relating  to  us and our other  subsidiaries,
including restrictions that limit our ability  to  make any substantial change in  the nature of our business
or to engage in transactions that would  constitute a change  of control, as defined in  the relevant  credit
facility, without repaying all of our indebtedness in part or in full.

Our credit facilities also impose specified financial covenants that  apply  to us  and our subsidiaries

on a consolidated  basis and to GasLog Partners and  its  subsidiaries on a  consolidated basis. These
financial covenants generally include  the following:

(cid:127) net working capital (excluding the  current portion of long-term  debt) must be not less than $0

(not  included in the GasLog Partners financial covenants);

(cid:127) total indebtedness divided by our total assets  must not exceed 75.0%  (in  the case of the  GasLog

Partners  financial covenants, must be less than  65.0%);

(cid:127) the aggregate amount of cash and cash  equivalents  and short-term investments must be at least
$75.0 million (in the case of the GasLog Partners financial covenants, the aggregate amount of
cash and cash equivalents, short-term investments  and available  undrawn facilities with
remaining maturities of at least six months (excluding loans  from affiliates) must be at  least
$45.0 million);

34

(cid:127) the ratio of EBITDA over our debt service obligations (including  interest  and debt repayments)

on a trailing 12 months basis must be not less than 110.0%.  The  ratio shall be regarded as
having been complied with even if the  ratio falls below the stipulated 110% when cash and  cash
equivalent and short-term investments are at least $110.0  million (not included in the  GasLog
Partners  financial covenants);

(cid:127) being  permitted to pay dividends subject to no event of default having occurred or  occurring as
a consequence of the payment of such dividends (in the  case of the GasLog Partners financial
covenants, being permitted to pay dividends subject to no event of default  having occurred  or
resulting from such payment); and

(cid:127) market value adjusted net worth must  be  not less  than $350.0 million  (not included in the

GasLog Partners financial covenants).

In addition, our credit facilities contain  covenants requiring us and certain of our subsidiaries to

maintain the aggregate of (i) the market  value, on a charter  exclusive  basis, of the mortgaged vessel or
vessels and (ii) the market value of any  additional security provided to the lenders, at a  value of  not
less  than 120.0% (in the case of the  debt  financing agreement entered  into  in October  2015 (the
‘‘October 2015 Facility’’) and the loan agreement  GAS-twenty  eight  Ltd., GAS-thirty Ltd., GAS-thirty
one Ltd., GAS-thirty two Ltd., GAS-thirty  three Ltd., GAS-thirty four Ltd. and GAS-thirty five Ltd
entered into on December 12, 2019 with 13 international banks, with Citibank N.A. London Branch
and DNB Bank ASA, London Branch acting as agents on behalf  of  the other finance parties (the
‘‘7xNB Facility’’), 115.0% for the first two  years after each drawdown  and 120.0% at any time
thereafter and, in the case of the credit  agreement of $193.7 million GasLog  Partners  entered into on
July 16, 2020, with DNB Bank ASA,  London  Branch, and  ING Bank N.V., London Branch, in order  to
refinance the existing indebtedness due  in  2021  on three of its vessels (the  ‘‘GasLog  Partners  LP
$193.7M Facility’’), 130%) of the then  outstanding  amount  under the applicable facility. If  we fail to
comply  with these covenants and are  not  able to obtain covenant waivers  or  modifications,  our  lenders
could require us to make prepayments or provide  additional  collateral sufficient to bring us into
compliance with such covenants and,  if  we fail to do so,  our lenders could accelerate our indebtedness.

Further, GasLog has issued the NOK  2024 Bonds and the US dollar denominated 8.875% Senior

Notes which also impose specified financial covenants that  apply to us and our subsidiaries on  a
consolidated basis. Under the terms of  the NOK 2024 Bonds, GasLog is  required to comply with the
following financial covenants:

(cid:127) net working capital (excluding the  current portion of long-term  debt) must be not less than $0;

(cid:127) total indebtedness divided by total  assets  must not exceed 75.0%;

(cid:127) the aggregate amount of cash and cash  equivalents  and short-term investments must be at least

$75.0 million;

(cid:127) the ratio of EBITDA over debt service obligations (including  interest  and debt repayments)  on a
trailing 12 months basis must be not less than 110.0%.The ratio shall be regarded  as having  been
complied with even if the ratio falls below the  stipulated  110% when  cash and cash equivalent
and short-term investments are at least  $110.0 million; and

(cid:127) GasLog’s market value adjusted net worth  must  at all times be not less than  $350.0 million.

In addition, the terms of the NOK 2024 Bonds include a dividend restriction according to which

GasLog may not (i) declare or make  any  dividend  payment or distribution, whether in cash or in kind,
(ii) re-purchase any of GasLog’s shares  or  undertake other similar transactions (including,  but not
limited to, total return swaps related to GasLog’s shares), or (iii)  grant any  loans or make other
distributions or transactions constituting a  transfer  of  value  to  GasLog’s shareholders (items (i), (ii)  and
(iii) collectively referred to as the ‘‘Distributions’’) that in aggregate exceed during any calendar year

35

$1.10/share. Notwithstanding the foregoing, GasLog may make any  amount of Distributions, so long as
the Group’s cash and cash equivalents  and short-term  investments exceed $150.0 million, provided that
GasLog can demonstrate by delivering a  compliance certificate  to  the bond trustee that no  event of
default is continuing or would result  from such Distributions. Under the terms of the 8.875%  Senior
Notes, GasLog is required to comply  with  the following financial covenants:

(cid:127) net working capital (excluding the  current portion of long-term  debt) must be not less than $0;

(cid:127) total indebtedness divided by total  indebtedness  plus total equity  must not exceed 75.0%;

(cid:127) the ratio of EBITDA over debt service, on  a trailing four quarter basis,  shall  be  not  less  than

100.0%;

(cid:127) the aggregate amount of all unencumbered cash and cash equivalents  must be not less than the

higher of 2.50% of total indebtedness  or $35.0 million;  and

(cid:127) the issuer’s market value adjusted  net worth  must at all times be not less than  $300.0 million.

Our ability to comply with covenants and restrictions contained in our financing arrangements  may

be affected by events beyond our control,  including prevailing economic, financial  and industry
conditions. A failure to comply with  covenants and restrictions or to meet our payment  and other
obligations could lead to defaults under our credit facilities which  could cause  our payment obligations
to be accelerated. We may not have,  or be able to obtain,  sufficient funds to make these accelerated
payments. Because obligations under our financing  arrangements are secured by our ships and are
guaranteed by our ship-owning subsidiaries,  if  we are  unable to repay debt under our financing
arrangements, the lenders could seek to foreclose on those assets, which  would materially and adversely
impact our business, financial condition,  results of operations  and cash flows, including  cash available
for dividends to our shareholders. In  addition,  a default  under one of our credit facilities could result
in the cross-acceleration of our other  indebtedness. For more  information regarding our  credit facilities,
please read ‘‘Item 5. Operating and Financial Review and Prospects—B. Liquidity and  Capital
Resources—Credit Facilities’’.

The significant global natural gas and  crude  oil price volatility,  amongst other factors referenced

above, have in turn led to a significant  shortening of the average duration  of spot charters fixed during
2020, as well as a significant decline in  average rates for new spot and shorter-term  LNG charters
commencing promptly. Unless LNG  charter market conditions improve, we may have  difficulty in
securing new charters at attractive rates and  durations  for  the  eight vessels in the  spot market. As  of
December 31, 2020, we had a total of 2,932 open vessel days during 2021. A failure to obtain charters
at acceptable rates on these vessels could  adversely affect  our business, financial condition, results of
operations and cash flows, including cash  available  for  dividends to our  shareholders.

Our debt levels may limit our flexibility  in obtaining additional  financing, pursuing other business
opportunities and paying dividends to our shareholders.

As of December 31, 2020, we had an aggregate of $3.8 billion of indebtedness outstanding under

our  credit agreements, the NOK 2024  Bonds and the 8.875% Senior Notes, of  which $245.6 million was
repayable within one year, and finance lease liabilities of $196.2  million, of  which $9.6 million was
repayable within one year. As of December  31, 2020, there  is $305.9  million  available under the 7xNB
Facility to finance a portion of the contract price of our  two  newbuildings delivering in  2021. We may
incur additional indebtedness in the future as  we grow  our fleet. This  level of debt could have
important consequences to us, including  the following:

(cid:127) our ability to obtain additional financing,  if necessary, for working capital,  capital expenditures,
ship acquisitions or other purposes may be impaired  or such  financing may not be available on
favorable terms;

36

(cid:127) we will need a substantial portion of our  cash flow to make principal and interest payments  on
our  debt, reducing the funds that would otherwise  be  available  for operations,  future business
opportunities and dividends to our shareholders;

(cid:127) the requirement on us to maintain minimum levels  of  liquidity as a percentage of our total debt,

reducing the funds that would otherwise be available for operations,  future  business
opportunities and dividends to our shareholders;

(cid:127) our costs of borrowing could increase as we become  more leveraged;

(cid:127) our debt level may make us more  vulnerable  than our competitors  with less debt to competitive

pressures or a downturn in our industry or the economy  generally;

(cid:127) our debt level may limit our flexibility  in responding to changing  business  and economic

conditions; and

(cid:127) if  we are unable to satisfy the restrictions included  in any  of our financing agreements  or are

otherwise in default under any of those  agreements, as a  result of our debt levels  or otherwise,
we will not be able to pay cash dividends to our  shareholders.

Our ability to service our debt depends upon, among other things,  our future financial and

operating performance, which will be affected by prevailing economic  conditions and financial, business,
regulatory and other factors, some of which are beyond our control. If  our  operating results  are not
sufficient to service our current or future indebtedness, we will be forced  to take actions such  as
reducing or delaying our business activities, acquisitions, investments  or  capital expenditures,  selling
assets, restructuring or refinancing our  debt or seeking additional equity  capital  or bankruptcy
protection. We may not be able to effect  any of these remedies on satisfactory terms, or  at all.

Our ability to pay dividends or to redeem our Preference Shares may be limited by the amount of cash  we
generate from operations, by restrictions  in  our  credit facilities and by  additional factors unrelated  to our
profitability.

We  intend to pay regular quarterly dividends. The declaration and payment of any dividend
(including cumulative dividends payable  with  respect to our Preference Shares) is subject to the
discretion of our board of directors and  the requirements  of  Bermuda  law.  The  timing and  amount  of
any dividend or redemption payments  will be dependent on our  earnings, financial condition, cash
requirements and availability, restrictions  in  our debt agreements,  the provisions of Bermuda law and
other factors. The amount of cash we generate from operations and the  actual amount of cash we will
have available for dividends or to redeem  our Preference Shares will vary based upon,  among  other
things:

(cid:127) general LNG shipping market conditions  and trends,  including charter  rates, ship values, factors
affecting supply and demand, technological  advancements and opportunities  for the  profitable
operations of LNG carriers;

(cid:127) our ability to comply with the specified financial covenants in our loan  facilities,  NOK 2024
Bonds and 8.875% Senior Notes and  as corporate guarantor for certain loan facilities on a
consolidated basis;

(cid:127) our ability to obtain new charters for our vessels at acceptable rates;

(cid:127) the charter hire payments we obtain from our charters as well  as our ability to re-charter the

vessels and the rates obtained upon the  expiration of our  existing charters;

(cid:127) our fleet expansion and associated uses of our cash as  well as  any financing requirements;

(cid:127) the due performance by our charterers of their  obligations;

37

(cid:127) delays in the delivery of newbuild vessels and the beginning of payments under charters relating

to those vessels;

(cid:127) the level of our operating costs, such as  the costs of crews, lubricants  and  insurance, as  well as

the costs of repairs, maintenance or modifications of our ships;

(cid:127) the number of unscheduled off-hire days  for  our  fleet  and the timing of, and number  of days

required for, scheduled dry-docking of our ships;

(cid:127) our ability to obtain financing to fund capital  expenditures, acquisitions and other corporate

activities, funding by banks of their financial  commitments,  and our ability to meet  our
obligations under our credit facilities;

(cid:127) prevailing global and regional economic or  political conditions;

(cid:127) changes in interest rates;

(cid:127) the effect of governmental regulations  and maritime self-regulatory organization standards on

the conduct of our business;

(cid:127) changes in the basis of taxation of  our activities  in various jurisdictions;

(cid:127) modification or  revocation of our dividend policy by our board of directors; and

(cid:127) the amount of any cash reserves established by our board  of  directors.

For information regarding the dividend payment restrictions in our financing agreements,  see
‘‘—Risks Inherent in an Investment in GasLog—Our credit  facilities are secured by our  ships and
contain payment obligations and restrictive covenants that  may restrict  our business and financing
activities as well as our ability to pay dividends. A failure  by us to meet  our  obligations under our
credit facilities could result in an event of default under such credit  facilities and  foreclosure on our
ships’’.

The amount of cash we generate from  our  operations may differ materially from  our  profit or loss
for the period, which will be affected  by  non-cash items. We  may incur  other expenses or liabilities that
could reduce or eliminate the cash available  for dividends.

Under Bermuda law, a company may  not declare  or pay dividends if there are reasonable grounds
for believing that: (i) the company is,  or  would after the payment  be,  unable to pay its liabilities as  they
become  due; or (ii) the realizable value  of the company’s assets would  thereby  be  less  than its
liabilities. Under our bye-laws, each common  share is  entitled to dividends as  and when any  such
dividends are declared by our board  of directors. We  may not declare a common dividend if the
payment of our preference dividends is  in  arrears.

As a result of these and the other factors mentioned above, we may pay  dividends  during periods

when we record losses and may not pay dividends  during periods  when we record a profit. We can give
no assurance that dividends will be paid in the  future.

We are a holding company and we depend  on the ability of our subsidiaries, including  GasLog Partners, to
distribute funds to us in order to satisfy our  financial  obligations  and to make dividend  payments.

We  are a holding company. Our subsidiaries  conduct substantially  all of our operations  and own all

of our operating assets, including our ships. As of March  1, 2021, we have  no significant assets other
than the equity interests in our subsidiaries, including GasLog Partners, in which we hold a 35.3%
equity interest (including our 2.0% general partner  interest). As  a result, our ability  to  pay our
obligations and to make dividend payments depends entirely  on our subsidiaries and their  ability to
distribute funds to us, including cash distributions and management  and administrative services fees
received from GasLog Partners. The  ability of  a subsidiary  to  make these distributions could be

38

affected by a claim or other action by  a  third party,  including a creditor, or  by  the law of its jurisdiction
of incorporation which regulates the  payment of dividends.

On February 6, 2020, in light of reduced expectations  for Steam vessel  utilization and  earnings,

GasLog Partners announced that it will  focus its  capital allocation on debt  repayment and prioritizing
balance sheet strength. The Partnership reduced its  quarterly common unit  distribution to $0.125 per
unit for the first quarter of 2020, from $0.561  per  unit for the fourth quarter of 2019  and then  further
decreased its quarterly common unit distribution  to  $0.01 per unit for the  third quarter of  2020
onwards. Other factors which may impact  the value  of our equity interest in GasLog Partners and its
ability to distribute funds to us are described  in its public  filings with the SEC. If we are unable  to
obtain funds from our subsidiaries, our board  of directors  may  exercise its discretion not to declare  or
pay dividends.

Fluctuations in exchange rates and interest rates could result in financial  losses for us.

Fluctuations in currency exchange rates and interest  rates  may  have an impact on our financial
performance. We receive virtually all of  our revenues  in dollars,  while some of our operating expenses,
including certain employee costs and crew  costs,  are denominated in euros and in  British pounds. As a
result, we are exposed to foreign exchange risk. However, we also maintain cash balances in  euros and
British pounds, which amounted to approximately  $1.8 million and $1.5 million as of December 31,
2020. We monitor exchange rate fluctuations  on a  continuous basis and  we  also hedge movements  in
currency exchange rates. However, there is still a risk that currency fluctuations  will have  a negative
effect on our business, financial condition,  results of operations  and cash flows, including  cash available
for dividends to our shareholders.

Increased regulatory oversight, uncertainty  relating  to the nature and timing  of the  phasing out of the London
Interbank Offered Rate (‘‘LIBOR’’), and  agreement on  any new  alternative reference rates may  adversely
impact our ability to manage our exposure  to  fluctuations  in interest  rates and borrowing costs.

The United Kingdom Financial Conduct  Authority (‘‘FCA’’),  which regulates LIBOR, has

announced that it will phase-out LIBOR by the end of 2023. It is unclear whether an extension will be
granted or new methods of calculating LIBOR will be established  such that it  continues to exist  after
2023, or if alternative rates or benchmarks will  be  adopted. Various alternative reference rates are
being considered in the financial community.  The  Secured Overnight Financing Rate has been
proposed by the Alternative Reference  Rate  Committee,  a committee convened by the  U.S. Federal
Reserve that includes major market participants  and on which  regulators participate, as  an alternative
rate to replace U.S. dollar LIBOR. However, it  is not possible  at  this  time to know the ultimate impact
a phase-out of LIBOR may have. The  changes may  adversely affect the trading  market  for LIBOR
based agreements, including our credit facilities, interest rate swaps and Preference Shares. We may
need to negotiate the replacement benchmark rate on our  credit facilities  and interest rate swaps,  and
the use of an alternative rate or benchmark may negatively impact our interest rate expense. Any other
contracts entered into in the ordinary  course of  business which currently refer to, use or include
LIBOR may also be impacted.

Further, if a LIBOR rate is not available on  a determination date  during  the floating rate period

for any of our LIBOR based agreements,  the terms  of such agreements  will require alternative
determination procedures which may result in interest or distribution  payments differing from
expectations and could affect our profit and the market value of our Preference Shares.

In addition, any changes announced by the FCA, including the FCA Announcement, the ICE
Benchmark Administration Limited (the independent  administrator of  LIBOR) or any other successor
governance or oversight body, or future  changes adopted by such body, in the  method pursuant to
which  LIBOR rates are determined may result in a sudden  or  prolonged increase or decrease in

39

reported LIBOR rates. If that were to  occur,  the level of interest  or dividend payments  during  the
floating rate period for our LIBOR based  agreements would be affected and could affect our profit or
the market value of our Preference Shares.

The derivative contracts used to hedge our  exposure to  fluctuations  in interest rates could result in  reductions
in  our shareholders’ equity as well as charges  in  our statement of  profit and loss.

We  enter into derivative contracts from  time to time for purposes of managing our exposure  to
fluctuations in interest rates applicable to floating  rate indebtedness. As  of  December 31,  2020, we  had
twenty seven derivative contracts in place  with a notional amount of $1.6  billion. The changes  in the
fair value of the twenty seven derivative contracts that have not been designated as cash flow hedging
instruments are recognized in our statement of profit or loss. Changes in  the fair value of any
derivative contracts that do not qualify for treatment as cash flow hedges  for financial reporting
purposes  would affect, among other things, our profit,  earnings  per  share and  compliance with the
market value  adjusted net worth covenants in our  credit  facilities.

As of December 31, 2020, we had three Cross  Currency Swaps, or  ‘‘CCSs’’, to exchange interest

payments and principal on maturity on the same terms as the NOK 2024  Bonds,  in order to hedge the
variability of the functional currency equivalent  cash flows on the NOK 2024 Bonds. As of
December 31, 2020, the three CCSs  had a  notional amount of $98.6 million and qualified as  cash flow
hedging instruments for accounting purposes. The effective portion of  changes  in the fair  value of  CCSs
is recognized in other comprehensive income while the ineffective portion impacts the statement of
profit or loss  for the period.

We  enter into forward foreign exchange contracts from  time to time for purposes of  managing our
exposure to fluctuations in foreign exchange rates applicable to payments in foreign  currencies  (mainly
Euros, British Pounds Sterling, Singapore  dollars  and Japanese Yen). As  of December  31, 2020, we had
six forward foreign exchange contracts  in place with  an aggregate notional amount of A13.5 million and
one with a notional amount of JP¥29.4  million.  The  changes in the  fair value of these contracts that
have not been designated as cash flow hedging  instruments are recognized  in our statement of profit or
loss. Changes in the fair value of any derivative  contracts that do not qualify  for treatment as cash flow
hedges for financial reporting purposes  would affect, among other things, our profit, earnings per share
and compliance with the market value adjusted net  worth covenants in our credit  facilities.

There is  no assurance that our derivative contracts  will provide  adequate protection against

adverse changes in interest rates or that  our  bank counterparties will be able to perform  their
obligations. In addition, as a result of the implementation of new regulation  of the swaps markets in
the United States, the European Union and elsewhere over  the  next few years, the  cost and availability
of interest rate and currency hedges may increase or suitable hedges may not be available.

Our earnings and business are subject  to  the  credit  risk associated with our contractual counterparties.

We  enter into, among other things, time charters and other contracts  with our customers,

shipbuilding contracts and refund guarantees  relating to newbuildings, credit facilities and  commitment
letters  with banks, insurance contracts,  interest rate swaps and foreign exchange forward contracts. Such
agreements subject us to counterparty  credit risk. For  example, for the year ended December 31, 2020,
57.2% of our revenues derived from  subsidiaries of Shell. We also have four vessels on  charter to
Cheniere, two vessels on charter to Gunvor, two vessels on charter to Centrica and  one  vessel  on
charter to each of Glencore, Jera, Trafigura, JOVO and  CNTIC VPower and eight vessels trading in
the short-term spot market under contracts  of  up to six  months. While we believe all our customers to
be strong counterparties, their creditworthiness as assessed by  independent parties such as credit rating
agencies is less strong than that of Shell.  In  the future,  we  may  enter into new  charters  with these and
other counterparties who are less creditworthy.

40

The ability and willingness of each of our counterparties to perform its  obligations under  a
contract with us will depend upon a  number of factors that  are  beyond our control and  may include,
among other things, general economic conditions,  the condition of the natural gas and LNG  markets
and charter hire rates. Should a counterparty fail to honor its obligations under agreements with us, we
could sustain significant losses which  in  turn could have  a material adverse effect on our  business,
financial condition, results of operations and cash flows, including cash  available  for dividends to our
shareholders.

Our business depends on certain of our senior executives  who are subject to increasing demands as a result of
our growth and who may not necessarily continue  to work for us.

Increasing demands are placed on our management as a result of our growth.  As we expand
operations, we must monitor our operations,  control  costs and maintain quality control. In addition,  the
provision  of management services to our  publicly traded subsidiary,  GasLog Partners, has increased the
complexity of our business and placed  additional demands on our  management. Our success  depends  to
a significant extent upon the abilities  and  the efforts  of our Chairman,  Peter G. Livanos, and certain of
our  senior executives. Mr. Livanos has  substantial experience in the  shipping industry and has worked
with us for many years. He and certain  of  our  senior executives are important to the execution of our
business strategies and to the growth and  development of our business. If Mr. Livanos or  one or more
of our senior executives ceased to be affiliated  with us, we may be unable to recruit other employees
with equivalent talent and experience,  and  our  business  and  financial condition  could  suffer.

Risks Related to Our Securities

The price of our common shares has recently declined significantly and may continue to be volatile.

The price of our equity securities may be volatile and may fluctuate  due to  factors including:

(cid:127) our payment of dividends;

(cid:127) the amount of cash dividends paid  to our shareholders;

(cid:127) repurchases by us of our common shares pursuant to our share  repurchase programme;

(cid:127) actual or anticipated fluctuations in quarterly and annual  results;

(cid:127) fluctuations in oil and natural gas prices;

(cid:127) fluctuations in the seaborne transportation industry, including fluctuations in  the charter  rates

and utilization of vessels in the LNG carrier  market;

(cid:127) fluctuations in supply and demand  for  LNG;

(cid:127) mergers and strategic alliances in the shipping industry;

(cid:127) changes in governmental regulations or  maritime  self-regulatory organizations  standards;

(cid:127) shortfalls in our operating results from  levels forecasted  by securities  analysts;

(cid:127) announcements  concerning us or our competitors;

(cid:127) the failure of securities analysts to publish research about us,  or analysts making  changes in their

financial estimates;

(cid:127) general economic conditions, including fluctuations  in interest rates;

(cid:127) terrorist acts;

(cid:127) future  sales of our shares or other  securities;

41

(cid:127) investors’ perceptions of us, the LNG industry, the LNG  shipping industry and  the energy

industry more broadly;

(cid:127) the general state of the securities markets; and

(cid:127) other developments affecting us, our industry or our competitors, such as the recent outbreak  of

the COVID-19 virus.

Securities markets worldwide are experiencing significant  price and volume fluctuations. The

market price for our common shares  may also be volatile. This  market  volatility, as well  as general
economic, market or political conditions,  could reduce  the market price of our common  shares despite
our  operating performance.

Increases in interest rates may cause the market price of our  securities  to  decline.

An increase in interest rates may cause a corresponding decline  in demand for equity investments

in general. Any such increase in interest  rates may result  in a  reduction in demand  for our securities
resulting from other relatively more attractive  investment opportunities and may cause the trading price
of our securities to decline.

We are a ‘‘foreign private issuer’’ under  NYSE rules,  and  as  such we are entitled to exemption from certain
NYSE corporate governance standards,  and you may  not  have the same protections afforded to shareholders of
companies that are subject to all of the  NYSE corporate governance requirements.

We  are a ‘‘foreign private issuer’’ under the securities laws of the United States and the rules of

the NYSE. Under the securities laws  of  the United States, ‘‘foreign private issuers’’ are subject  to
different disclosure requirements than U.S. domiciled  registrants, as well  as different financial  reporting
requirements. Under the NYSE rules, a  ‘‘foreign  private issuer’’ is subject  to  less  stringent corporate
governance requirements. Subject to  certain  exceptions, the rules of the  NYSE permit a ‘‘foreign
private  issuer’’ to follow its home country practice  in lieu of the listing  requirements of the  NYSE,
including (i) the requirement that a majority of the board of directors consist  of independent  directors,
(ii) the requirement that a nominating/corporate  governance committee be established, (iii) the
requirement that the compensation committee be composed  entirely of independent directors and have
a written charter addressing the committee’s  purpose and responsibilities and  (iv) the requirement  of
an annual performance evaluation of  the compensation committee.

As permitted by these exemptions, as well as by our bye-laws and the laws of Bermuda, we may

have non-independent directors serving as committee members on our compensation committee. As a
result, non-independent directors may,  among other things,  participate in  fixing  the compensation of
our  management, making share and option  awards and resolving governance issues regarding our
Company.

Accordingly, in the future you may not have  the same protections afforded to shareholders of

companies that are subject to all of the  NYSE corporate governance requirements.

Substantial future sales of our equity securities could  cause the market  price of our equity  securities  to decline.

Sales of a substantial number of our  equity securities in the public market, or the  perception  that
these sales could occur, may depress  the  market  price for our equity securities.  These sales could also
impair our ability to raise additional capital through  the sale  of our  equity securities.

In the future we may issue additional  equity securities  which may  be  pari passu with or senior to
our  common shares. The issuance by  us of additional  common  shares  or  other equity securities that are

42

contractually or structurally pari passu  with or  senior to our common shares would have  the following
effects:

(cid:127) our shareholders’ proportionate ownership  interest  in us will decrease;

(cid:127) the dividend amount payable per share on  our  common  shares  may  be  lower;

(cid:127) the relative voting strength of each  previously outstanding common  share may be diminished;

and

(cid:127) the market price of our common shares may  decline.

Our shareholders also may elect to sell large  numbers of  equity securities held  by  them from  time

to time. The number of our equity securities available  for sale in  the public  market will be limited by
restrictions applicable under securities laws.

Our Preference Shares are subordinated  to  our debt  obligations  and investors’ interests could be diluted by the
issuance of additional preference shares  and  by other transactions.

Our Preference Shares are subordinated  to  all of our existing and future indebtedness.  As of

December 31, 2020, we had $3.8 billion of outstanding indebtedness. Our existing indebtedness
restricts, and our future indebtedness  may include restrictions on, our ability to pay dividends to
shareholders. Our memorandum of association and bye-laws currently authorizes the issuance of an
unlimited number of preference shares  out of the 500,000,000 shares of share capital in one  or more
classes or series. The issuance of additional  preference  shares  on a  parity  with or senior to our
Preference Shares would dilute the interests of the  holders of our  Preference Shares, and any  issuance
of preference shares senior to or at parity with our Preference Shares  or of additional indebtedness
could affect our ability to pay dividends on, redeem or  pay  the liquidation preference on  our
Preference Shares. No provisions relating  to  our Preference Shares protect  the holders of our
Preference Shares in the event of a highly leveraged or other transaction, including  the sale,  lease or
conveyance of all or substantially all  our assets or business, which  might adversely affect  the holders of
our  Preference Shares.

Our Preference Shares rank pari passu with  any  other  class or series of shares  established after the

original issue date of the Preference Shares  that is not expressly  subordinated or senior to the
Preference Shares as to the payment of dividends  and  amounts payable upon liquidation or
reorganization. If less than all dividends  payable with respect to the Preference Shares and any parity
securities are paid, any partial payment  shall be made  pro rata with respect to shares of Preference
Shares and any parity securities entitled  to  a dividend payment at  such time in proportion to the
aggregate amounts remaining due in  respect of such shares at  such time.

Holders of our Preference Shares have extremely limited  voting  rights.

Our common shares are the only class of our  shares carrying full voting rights. Holders of the
Preference Shares generally have no  voting rights. However, if  and  whenever dividends payable on the
Preference Shares are in arrears for six or  more quarterly periods, whether or  not  consecutive,  holders
of Preference Shares (voting together  as a  class with all other classes or series of parity securities upon
which  like voting rights have been conferred and are  exercisable) will be entitled  to  elect  one additional
director to serve on our board of directors,  and the  size of our board of directors will be increased  as
needed to accommodate such change (unless the size of our board of directors  already has been
increased by reason of the election of a  director by holders of  parity securities upon which  like voting
rights have been conferred and with which the  Preference  Shares voted as  a class  for the  election of
such director). The right of such holders  of Preference Shares to elect a  member  of our  board of
directors will continue until all accumulated and  unpaid dividends on the Preference Shares have been

43

paid in full. In addition, holders of Preference Shares are entitled  to  vote together with holders of
common shares on matters related to the approval of an amalgamation or  merger.

Our Preference Shares will remain outstanding after the close of the Transaction, and  could be negatively
affected thereby.

While it is expected that our Preference  Shares  will  remain  outstanding after the  completion  of the

Transaction, the Preference Shares could be negatively  impacted  by the  Transaction. After
consummation of the Transaction, the common  shares of GasLog will  be  acquired  by  GEPIF and will
no longer be publicly traded. The trading markets for the Preference Shares that remain outstanding
after completion of the Transaction may become limited and may command a lower price than would a
comparable security issued by a public  company.

The Preference Shares represent perpetual  equity  interests and  holders have  no right to  receive any greater
payment than the liquidation preference  regardless of the circumstances.

The Preference Shares represent perpetual equity interests in us and, unlike our indebtedness, will

not give rise to a claim for payment of  a  principal amount at  a particular date. As  a result, holders  of
the Preference Shares may be required  to  bear the financial risks of  an investment in  the Preference
Shares for an indefinite period of time. In addition, the Preference Shares rank junior in  all  our
indebtedness  and other liabilities, and any other senior  securities we may issue in the  future with
respect to assets available to satisfy claims against us.

The payment due to a holder of Preference  Shares upon a liquidation is fixed at  the redemption

preference of $25.00 per share plus accumulated and unpaid dividends  to  the date of  liquidation. If, in
the case of our liquidation, there are remaining assets to be distributed after  payment of this amount,
holders  of Preference Shares will have no  right  to  receive or  to  participate in these amounts.
Furthermore, if the market price for Preference Shares  is greater than the liquidation preference,
holders  of Preference Shares will have no  right  to  receive the market price  from us upon our
liquidation.

Entities controlled by members of the Livanos family are  our principal shareholders and can effectively
control  the outcome of most matters on  which our shareholders are entitled  to vote; their  interests  may be
different from yours.

Entities controlled by members of the Livanos family, including  our Chairman,  may be deemed to
beneficially own approximately 41.3%  of our issued and outstanding common shares. As  a result of his
shareholding, Mr. Livanos can effectively control the outcome of most matters  on which  our
shareholders are entitled to vote, including the election of our entire  board  of directors  and other
significant corporate actions. The interests of these shareholders  may  be  different to yours.

Provisions in our organizational documents may have anti-takeover effects.

Our bye-laws contain provisions that could make it more difficult for  a  third  party to acquire us

without the consent of our board of  directors.  These  provisions require  an affirmative vote of  a
majority of the votes attaching to all issued and outstanding  shares to approve any merger,
consolidation, amalgamation or similar  transactions. Our bye-laws also provide for  restrictions on the
time period in which directors may be nominated.

These provisions could make it difficult for our shareholders to replace or remove our current
board of directors or could have the effect of discouraging,  delaying or preventing an offer by a third
party to acquire us, even if the third  party’s offer  may be considered  beneficial  by  many shareholders.
As a result, shareholders may be limited  in their ability to obtain a  premium for  their  shares.

44

Tax Risks

In addition to the following risk factors, you should read  ‘‘Item 10. Additional Information—E. Tax

Considerations’’ for a more complete  discussion of the  material  Bermuda  and U.S. Federal income tax
considerations relating to us and the  ownership and disposition of  our common  shares and Preference
Shares.

We may  have to pay tax on U.S.-source income, which  would reduce our  earnings.

Under the United States Internal Revenue Code of  1986, as amended, or the ‘‘Code’’,  the U.S.
source gross transportation income of  a ship-owning or chartering corporation, such as ourselves, is
subject to a 4% U.S. Federal income  tax  without allowance for  deduction, unless  that  corporation
qualifies for exemption from tax under  a  tax treaty or Section  883 of the  Code  and the  Treasury
Regulations promulgated thereunder. U.S. source  gross transportation  income  consists of  50% of the
gross  shipping income that is attributable to transportation that begins  or  ends, but  that  does not both
begin and end, in the United States.

GasLog Ltd. has qualified for the statutory tax exemption  for  the year of 2020 and intends to
continue to qualify for the foreseeable  future.  However,  no assurance can be given that this will be the
case. If GasLog Ltd. is not entitled to  this exemption under  Section 883 for any taxable year, we  would
be subject to the 4% U.S. Federal income tax described above.  The imposition of this taxation could
have a negative effect on our business and would  result in decreased earnings available for  dividends  to
our  shareholders. For a more detailed discussion, see  the section entitled ‘‘Item  10. Additional
Information—E. Tax Considerations—Material U.S. Federal Income  Tax  Considerations—U.S.  Taxation
of Our Operating Income’’.

If we were treated as a ‘‘passive foreign investment company’’, certain adverse U.S.  Federal income tax
consequences could result to U.S. shareholders.

A foreign corporation will be treated  as  a ‘‘passive foreign investment company’’, or ‘‘PFIC’’,  for
U.S. Federal income tax purposes if at least  75% of its gross income for  any tax year consists  of  certain
types of ‘‘passive income’’, or at least  50%  of  the average value of the corporation’s assets produce  or
are held for the production of those  types of ‘‘passive  income’’. For purposes of these tests, ‘‘passive
income’’ includes dividends, interest, gains from the  sale or exchange  of  investment property and rents
and royalties other than rents and royalties that are  received  from unrelated parties in connection  with
the active conduct of a trade or business. For purposes of these tests,  income derived from the
performance of services does not constitute ‘‘passive income’’. U.S. shareholders of a PFIC  are subject
to a disadvantageous U.S. Federal income  tax regime with respect to the income derived  by  the PFIC,
the distributions they receive from the  PFIC and the  gain, if  any, they  derive from  the sale  or other
disposition of their shares in the PFIC. If we are  treated  as a  PFIC  for any tax year, we  will provide
information to U.S. shareholders who  request such  information  to  enable them  to  make certain
elections to alleviate certain of the adverse  U.S. Federal income tax consequences that would arise as a
result of holding an interest in a PFIC.

Based on our proposed method of operation,  we do not believe that  GasLog  Ltd. is a  PFIC for
this  tax year. In this regard, we intend  to  treat the  gross income we  derive  or are deemed  to  derive
from our time chartering activities as  services  income, rather than rental income. Accordingly,  we
believe that our income from our time chartering activities does  not constitute ‘‘passive income’’, and
the assets that we  own and operate to produce that income do not constitute  passive  assets.

There is, however, no legal authority under the PFIC rules addressing our proposed  method of
operation. Accordingly, the U.S. Internal  Revenue  Service, or the  ‘‘IRS’’,  or a  court of law may not
accept our position, and there is a risk  that  the IRS  or a court of law could determine that we are a

45

PFIC. Moreover, GasLog Ltd. could constitute a PFIC for a future tax  year  if  there were  to  be  changes
in the nature and extent of our operations.

If the IRS were to find that GasLog  Ltd. is  or has been a PFIC for any tax year, U.S.  shareholders

would face adverse tax consequences. Under the PFIC  rules, unless those  shareholders make certain
elections available under the Code, such shareholders would be liable to pay U.S. Federal income tax
at the then prevailing income tax rates  on  ordinary  income plus  interest upon  excess  distributions and
upon any gain from the disposition of  our  common shares or Preference  Shares,  as if the excess
distribution or gain had been recognized  ratably over the shareholder’s holding  period. Please read
‘‘Item 10. Additional Information—E. Tax  Considerations—Material U.S. Federal Income  Tax
Considerations—U.S. Federal Income  Taxation of U.S.  Holders—PFIC Status and Significant Tax
Consequences’’ for a more detailed discussion of the U.S. Federal income  tax consequences to U.S.
shareholders if GasLog Ltd. is treated as a PFIC.

ITEM 4.

INFORMATION ON THE COMPANY

A. History and Development of the Company

GasLog was incorporated in Bermuda on July  16, 2003. GasLog and its subsidiaries are primarily

engaged in the ownership, operation and management of vessels in the LNG  market,  providing
maritime services for the transportation  of  LNG on a worldwide basis and LNG vessel management
services. The Group conducts its operations through  its vessel-owning subsidiaries and through its vessel
management services subsidiary.

Our company and its founders have  a  long history in  shipping and  in LNG carriers. Our  largest

shareholder is Ceres Shipping, whose founding family’s shipping activities commenced  more than
100 years ago and which is currently controlled by our Chairman, Peter  G. Livanos. Ceres  Shipping
owns its shareholding in GasLog through  its wholly owned  subsidiary, Blenheim  Holdings Ltd.
(‘‘Blenheim Holdings’’). Ceres Shipping entered  the LNG sector in 2001 by undertaking the
management of BG Group’s owned fleet  of LNG carriers  through our subsidiary GasLog  LNG
Services, and in 2003 GasLog Ltd. was incorporated. Until  2010, when  we took delivery  of  the  GasLog
Savannah and the GasLog Singapore, our business principally consisted of providing technical ship
management services, as well as plan  approval  and construction supervision services for  newbuilding
LNG carriers. As a result, we have had  a longer presence in LNG shipping than many other
independent owners currently operating  in the sector. For a description of our historical  and current
capital expenditures, see ‘‘Item 5. Operating and Financial Review and  Prospects—B.  Liquidity and
Capital Resources—Capital Expenditures’’.

On April 4, 2012, we completed our initial public offering, or ‘‘IPO’’, and  our  common shares
began trading on the NYSE on March  30, 2012 under the ticker symbol  ‘‘GLOG’’. On  January 22,
2014, GasLog completed a follow-on  public offering of  10,925,000  common shares  (including 1,425,000
common shares in relation to the over-allotment option exercised  in full by the underwriters)  and a
concurrent private placement of 2,317,460 common shares at  the public offering  price to certain of its
directors and officers and one of its major shareholders. The offering and  private placement resulted in
net proceeds of $199.0 million which  were used to partially  finance the acquisition  of  the first three
ships acquired from MSL in 2014. On April 16, 2014, GasLog  completed  a second follow-on public
offering of 4,887,500 common shares  (including 637,500 common shares in relation to the
over-allotment option exercised in full by the  underwriters). The offering resulted in net proceeds of
$109.9 million which were used to partially finance the acquisition of the additional three ships
acquired from MSL in 2014.

On May 12, 2014, our subsidiary GasLog Partners completed  an IPO  of 9,660,000 common  units
(including 1,260,000 units in relation  to  the  over-allotment option exercised  in full by the  underwriters),
resulting in net proceeds of $186.0 million. GasLog Partners is  a  Marshall Islands master limited

46

partnership formed by us to own and  operate LNG carriers under multi-year charters. Its common
units representing limited partner interests are traded  on the NYSE under the  ticker symbol ‘‘GLOP’’.
Concurrently with the initial public offering,  GasLog  Partners  acquired a 100.0% ownership interest in
GAS-three Ltd., GAS-four Ltd. and GAS-five Ltd., the  entities that  owned the  GasLog Shanghai, the
GasLog Santiago and the GasLog Sydney, from GasLog, in exchange for (i) 162,358 common units and
9,822,358 subordinated units issued to  GasLog representing a 49.8% ownership interest and  all  of the
incentive distribution rights that entitled GasLog to increasing percentages of the  cash that the
Partnership distributed in excess of $0.43125 per unit  per  quarter,  (ii) 400,913 general  partner units
issued to GasLog Partners GP LLC, a wholly  owned subsidiary  of GasLog, representing a 2.0% general
partner interest and (iii) $65.7 million  of cash consideration paid directly  to  us from the offering
proceeds. In addition to the cash consideration  of  $65.7 million paid to us, GasLog Partners used the
$186.0 million net proceeds of its IPO to (a) prepay $82.6 million of debt plus accrued interest of
$0.4 million and (b) make a payment  of $2.3 million  (including $0.3  million accrued  interest) to settle
the mark-to-market loss on termination  of one interest rate swap and reduction of a  second interest
rate swap in connection with the aforementioned debt  prepayment. The balance of $35.0 million was
retained by GasLog Partners for general partnership purposes.

Since GasLog Partners’ IPO, the Partnership has completed  follow-on equity offerings  as set out
below, the proceeds of which have been  used for general corporate purposes including partially funding
the acquisition of the GasLog subsidiaries  that own  the vessels listed below:

Date of Equity Offering

Equity Offering

Net Proceeds

Vessels Purchased

September 29, 2014 . . . Follow-on common

$133.0 million

June  26,  2015 . . . . . . . Follow-on common

$171.8 million

equity offering

equity offering

August  5, 2016 . . . . . . Follow-on common

$52.3 million

equity offering

Methane Rita Andrea and
Methane Jane Elizabeth
Methane Alison Victoria,
Methane Shirley Elisabeth
and Methane Heather
Sally
GasLog Seattle

Date Acquisition
Completed

September 29, 2014

July 1, 2015

November 1, 2016

January  27,  2017 . . . . . Follow-on common

$78.2 million

GasLog Greece

May 3, 2017

May 15, 2017 . . . . . . . Preference equity

$138.8 million

GasLog Geneva

July 3, 2017

equity offering

offering

May 16, 2017  onwards . Common equity
offering through
an at-the-market
common equity
offering which
commenced  in
May 2017 (the
‘‘ATM
Programme’’)

$123.4 million (through
December 31, 2020)

Solaris
Methane Becki Anne

October 20, 2017
November 14, 2018

January  17,  2018 . . . . . Preference equity

$111.0 million

GasLog Gibraltar

April 26, 2018

November  15, 2018 . . . Preference  equity

$96.3 million

GasLog Glasgow

April 1, 2019

offering

offering

On April 7, 2015, GasLog completed a  public  offering  of  4,600,000 Preference Shares, par value

$0.01 per share, liquidation preference  $25.00 per share  and  priced at  $25.00 per share, including
600,000 shares issued upon the exercise in full by  the underwriters  of their  option to purchase
additional Preference Shares. The net proceeds  from the offering after deducting  underwriting
discounts, commissions and other offering expenses were $110.7  million  to  be  used  for general
corporate purposes. The Preference Shares are  listed on the NYSE  under the  symbol ‘‘GLOG  PR A’’.

As of March 1, 2021, GasLog holds a  35.3% interest in the Partnership and,  as a result  of its

ownership of the general partner and the  fact that the general partner elects the majority of the

47

Partnership’s  directors in accordance with  the Partnership’s partnership agreement, or the  ‘‘Partnership
Agreement’’,  GasLog has the ability to  control the  Partnership’s affairs and policies. Consequently,
GasLog Partners is consolidated in the Group’s financial statements. The Group’s control of the
general partner and consequently of the  Partnership  could  be  challenged  with a 66.67%  vote  by  other
unitholders. However, as the Partnership Agreement limits any single unitholder to a maximum of 4.9%
of the vote, it is highly unlikely that a  coordinated  vote  of widely  held unitholders will be organized  to
change the Group’s control of the general partner. As a result, the Group  continues to assume that
control of the general partner is a relevant basis on which  to  conclude control  of the Partnership.

On October 1, 2015, GasLog, Dynagas and Golar established the Cool Pool to market their vessels

operating in the LNG shipping spot market. In June and July  2018, Dynagas removed  its  three vessels
from the Cool Pool and renounced its 33% ownership in the Cool Pool. On  June 6, 2019, GasLog
entered into a termination agreement  with the  Cool Pool and  Golar,  whereby GasLog  assumed
commercial control of its six vessels operating in the LNG  carrier spot market through the  Cool Pool at
that time. Following expiry of their commitments, GasLog vessels were withdrawn from  the Cool Pool
in June  and July 2019.

On June 24, 2019, the Partnership Agreement was  amended, effective June 30, 2019, to eliminate

the general partner’s incentive distribution rights (the ‘‘IDRs’’)  in exchange  for the  issuance  by  the
Partnership to GasLog of 2,532,911 common units  and 2,490,000 Class B  units (of which 415,000 are
Class B-1 units, 415,000 are Class B-2 units,  415,000 are Class B-3 units, 415,000  are Class B-4 units,
415,000 are Class B-5 units and 415,000 are Class B-6  units),  issued on June 30,  2019. The Class B
units have all of the rights and obligations attached to the common units, except  for voting rights and
participation in distributions until such  time as GasLog  exercises its  right to convert the Class B units
to common units. On July 1, 2020 the 415,000 Class B-1  units were  converted into 415,000 common
units. The remaining Class B units will become eligible for conversion  on a  one-for-one basis into
common units at GasLog’s option on July  1, 2021,  July 1, 2022, July  1, 2023,  July 1,  2024 and July  1,
2025 for the Class B-2 units, Class B-3 units, Class B-4 units,  Class  B-5 units and the Class B-6 units,
respectively. Following the IDR elimination,  the allocation of  GasLog Partners’ profit to the
non-controlling interests is based on the  revised distribution policy for available cash  stated  in the
Partnership Agreement as amended,  effective June 30, 2019,  and  under which  98% of the available
cash is distributed to the common unitholders  and  2% is distributed to the  general partner. The
updated earnings allocation applies to the total GasLog  Partners’  profit for the three  months ended
June 30, 2019 and onwards.

On June 29, 2020, GasLog completed the sale of 14,400,000 common  shares at a price  of  $2.50 per

share for total gross proceeds of $36.0  million through a private placement of unregistered common
shares (‘‘the Private Placement’’). The  net proceeds were used for general corporate purposes.
Approximately 75% of shares issued in the  Private Placement were purchased by GasLog’s directors
and affiliates, including 6,500,000 common shares  purchased by Blenheim  Holdings Ltd., wholly-owned
by the Livanos family and 4,000,000  common shares purchased by a  wholly-owned affiliate  of the
Onassis Foundation.

On February 22, 2021, we announced  that GasLog has entered into a Merger Agreement with

GEPIF. Under the Merger Agreement, GEPIF will acquire  all of the outstanding  common shares of
GasLog that are not held by the Rolling Shareholders  of GasLog  in exchange  for $5.80 in cash per
common share. Immediately following the  completion of the Transaction, the  Rolling  Shareholders will
continue to hold approximately 55% of  the outstanding common shares of GasLog and GEPIF will
hold approximately 45%. Promptly after completion of  the Transaction, the common shares of GasLog
will be delisted from the NYSE.

The Transaction is expected to close  in  the second quarter of 2021,  subject to approval of  the
Transaction by GasLog shareholders at  a  special meeting, including by a majority  of the shares  held by

48

the non-Rolling Shareholders present  at the shareholders meeting that  will be held in connection with
the Transaction, and the satisfaction  or  waiver of certain customary  closing conditions. GasLog’s
preference shares shall remain outstanding and continue to trade on the NYSE immediately following
the completion of the Transaction.

We  maintain our principal executive offices at  69 Akti Miaouli,  18537 Piraeus,  Greece.  Our

telephone number at that address is +30 210 459 1000. We are registered with the  Registrar of
Companies in Bermuda under registration number 33928. We maintain a  registered office in Bermuda
at Clarendon House, 2 Church Street,  Hamilton, HM  11, Bermuda.

We  are subject to the informational requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as
amended (the ‘‘Exchange Act’’). In accordance with these  requirements, we file reports and  other
information as a foreign private issuer with the  SEC. You may obtain  copies of all or any part  of such
materials from the SEC upon payment  of  prescribed fees. You may also inspect reports  and other
information regarding registrants, such as  us, that file  electronically with the SEC without charge at  a
website maintained by the SEC at http://www.sec.gov. These  documents  and  other important
information on our governance are posted on our website  and may  be  viewed at
http://www.gaslogltd.com.

B. Business Overview

Overview

We  are an international owner, operator and manager of LNG carriers providing support to
international energy companies as part of their LNG  logistics chain. Our  owned and bareboat fleet as
of March 1, 2021, consists of 35 LNG carriers, including 33 ships on the water  and two LNG  carriers
on order at one of the world’s leading  LNG  shipbuilders, Samsung. This includes 15 LNG  carriers in
operation that are owned by GasLog Partners, with which  we  have entered into certain agreements
governing our relationship, including  purchase options for certain of  our ships. We currently  manage
and operate 33 LNG carriers including  15  of  our  wholly owned ships  in operation, 14 ships contributed
or sold to the Partnership (one is managed by a subsidiary of  Shell), one additional LNG carrier in
which  we have a 25.0% interest and  three  vessels secured  under a long-term bareboat charters from
Lepta Shipping, Sea 190 Leasing and Hai Kuo Shipping. We are  also supervising the  construction of
our newbuildings. We operate our vessels under time charters. As of December 31, 2020, these
contracts are expected to provide total contracted revenues of $3.5 billion during their initial terms,
which  expire between 2021 and 2032.  During  2020, 2019 and 2018, we generated revenues of
$674.1 million, $668.6 million and $618.3  million, respectively. For disaggregation of revenues,  see
‘‘Item 5. Operating and Financial Review and Prospects—Operating  Results—Customers’’.

The LNG carrier in which we have a 25.0% interest is  the Methane Nile Eagle, a 2007-built LNG

carrier technically managed by us that  is currently operating  under a 20-year time charter  to  MSL.

Our current time charters have initial  terms of up to 12 years and include options that permit the

charterers to extend the terms for successive periods under hire  rate provisions. We will continue to
evaluate  the attractiveness of longer  and shorter-term chartering opportunities  as the commercial
characteristics of the LNG carrier industry evolve. Our orderbook of new LNG carriers has staggered
delivery dates, facilitating a smooth integration of the  ships  into  our fleet as well  as significant  annual
growth through 2021. This has the additional advantage of spreading our exposure to the  re-delivery  of
these ships over several years upon expiration of their current  charters.

Each  of our 33 owned and bareboat  LNG  carriers and  two  LNG carriers  under construction  is
designed with a capacity of between approximately 145,000  cbm and 180,000 cbm. We believe  this  size
range maximizes their operational flexibility  as these  ships  are compatible with most existing LNG
terminals around the world. All but one  of the LNG  carriers in our  owned and  bareboat  fleet are of

49

similar specifications, which allows us  to  benefit  from economies of scale  and operating efficiencies in
ship construction, crew training, crew rotation  and shared spare  parts. Upon delivery  of  the last  of  our
two contracted newbuildings, our owned and bareboat fleet will  have an average  age of 7.0 years,
making it one of the youngest in the industry. By  comparison,  as of December 31, 2020,  the average
age for the global trading LNG carrier fleet  including LNG carriers of all sizes, was 10  years.

Our wholly owned subsidiary, GasLog LNG Services, exclusively handles  the technical  management
of our fleet, including plan approval for  new ship orders, supervision  of  ship construction  and planning
and supervision of dry-dockings, as well as technical operations, crewing,  training, maintenance,
regulatory and classification compliance and health, safety, security and environmental,  or ‘‘HSSE’’,
management and reporting. With over 20  years of technical management  experience,  including 15  years
as sole technical manager of BG Group’s  owned fleet of  LNG carriers, we have established  a track
record for the efficient, safe and reliable operation of  LNG carriers which is evidenced by our safety
performance and the limited off-hire  days of the 33 ships currently operating under our management.

A wholly owned subsidiary of GasLog acquired a 20% shareholding in Gastrade in 2016. Gastrade

is licensed to develop an LNG receiving  terminal utilizing an  FSRU offshore  Alexandroupolis in
Northern Greece.  The FSRU will be connected to the Greek national grid via a 24km  subsea pipeline.
A wholly owned subsidiary of GasLog has  executed a  long-term Operation  and Maintenance
Agreement with Gastrade under which  GasLog  will be the operator of the FSRU. This  agreement is
tied to the Terminal Use Agreement and  subject to final investment decision (‘‘FID’’)  of the
Alexandroupolis Project.

In March 2020, Gastrade concluded the second phase  of  the regulatory market  test for long-term

capacity  in the terminal with an aggregate long-term profile of binding offers for up to 15  years,
reaching 2.6 billion cubic meters per  year, from  Greek and international natural gas  companies, as  well
as end  consumers. The binding offers  were subsequently confirmed by the signing of Advanced
Capacity Reservation Agreements for the  reservation of regasification capacity  at the  FSRU  terminal.

DEPA, the Greek State Gas Company, acquired a 20%  shareholding  in Gastrade in  2019. On
August 24, 2020, BulgarTransGaz, the Bulgarian State Gas  Transportation Company signed agreements
to acquire 20% of the shares in Gastrade, and on November  4, 2020, DESFA, the  Greek National Gas
Transmission Operator, signed agreements to acquire 20%  of the shares  in Gastrade.  The  closing  of
these two acquisitions are pending ‘‘no objection’’  consents from competition authorities.

Gastrade has selected the preferred bidder  for the  Engineering Procurement and Construction

contract for the construction of the pipeline and offshore installation and is progressing the Sale and
Purchase Agreement for the procurement of the FSRU. Execution of the contracts are expected in the
first quarter of 2021.

Gastrade currently expects to take FID on the  project in first half of 2021  and start-up of the LNG

terminal is anticipated to occur in the fourth quarter of 2023.

50

In September 2019, GasLog announced  that a wholly owned subsidiary of GasLog had  signed a

10-year time charter with Sinolam for  the provision  of  a LNG  FSU to a gas-fired power project  being
developed on Panama. The time charter is expected to be fulfilled through the conversion of the
GasLog Singapore. The FSU will receive, store and send out LNG to a  gas-fired  power plant  currently
being developed near Col´on, Panama, by Sinolam Smarter energy  LNG Power  Company, a subsidiary
of private Chinese  investment group  Shanghai Gorgeous Investment  Development Company. The
power project has signed long-term power purchase agreements with leading Panamanian  utility
companies as well as a 15-year LNG sale and purchase agreement  with Shell.

In November 2019, GasLog announced plans to relocate more of  its employees including several

members of senior management to the Piraeus, Greece office,  home of  our  operational platform, in
order to enhance execution, efficiency  and operational excellence  and to reduce overheads. By the end
of 2020, we had concluded these organizational changes,  having closed the  Monaco  office and
substantially reduced the number of employees in our London office.

In August 2020, as the next phase in  our  strategy to enhance efficiency and  reduce costs,  we
announced that the decision had been taken to include GasLog  Partners and the Stamford office in the
initiative. We reduced the size of the  Partnership’s board of directors  from seven to five and  closed  the
Stamford, Connecticut office.

The offices in Singapore and Korea have  been unaffected by  the  changes. We incurred total
restructuring costs  of approximately $10.0 million ($5.3 million  in the year ended  December 31,  2020
and $4.7 million in the year ended December 31,  2019).  In  2021 and  beyond, we  expect like-for-like
General and Administrative Expenses  to  fall by a similar  amount of approximately $9.0 million.

On February 6, 2020, GasLog Partners guided towards a  reduction in  its quarterly distribution
from the first quarter of 2020 as a result  of a  number of increasingly strong negative indicators in the
LNG shipping market. The Partnership reduced its quarterly common unit distribution  to  $0.125 in the
first quarter of 2020 from $0.561 per  unit for the  fourth quarter  2019, followed by a further  reduction
to $0.01 per common unit beginning  with the  third quarter  of 2020. GasLog Partners is now  focusing
capital allocation on debt repayment  and  prioritizing balance  sheet strength for  2020, in order to lower
cash break-evens and to reposition the Partnership for  potential  future growth if its cost of capital
allows GasLog Partners to access debt  and  equity capital on acceptable terms.

51

Our Fleet

Owned Fleet

The following table presents information about our  wholly owned vessels  and their associated  time

charters  as of March 1, 2021:

Charterer
(for contracts
Capacity of more than

Cargo

Vessel Name

Year Built

(cbm)

six  months) Propulsion

1
Methane Lydon Volney . . . . .
2
GasLog Savannah . . . . . . . .
3
GasLog Skagen . . . . . . . . . .
4
GasLog Saratoga . . . . . . . . .
5
GasLog Chelsea . . . . . . . . . .
6
GasLog Salem . . . . . . . . . . .
7
GasLog Genoa . . . . . . . . . .
8
GasLog Windsor . . . . . . . . .
9
GasLog Westminster . . . . . . .
10 GasLog Georgetown . . . . . . .
11 GasLog Galveston . . . . . . . .
12 GasLog Gladstone . . . . . . . .
13 GasLog Warsaw . . . . . . . . . .

2006
2010
2013
2014
2010
2015
2018
2020
2020
2020
2021
2019
2019

145,000
155,000
155,000
155,000
153,600
155,000
174,000
180,000
180,000
174,000
174,000
174,000
180,000

14 GasLog Singapore . . . . . . . .

2010

155,000

15 GasLog Wales . . . . . . . . . . .

2020

180,000

Spot Market
Spot Market
Spot  Market
Spot Market
Glencore
Gunvor
Shell
Centrica
Centrica
Cheniere
Cheniere
Shell
Cheniere
Endesa
Spot Market
Sinolam(3)
Jera

Steam
TFDE
TFDE
TFDE
TFDE
TFDE
X-DF
X-DF
X-DF
X-DF
X-DF
X-DF
X-DF

TFDE

X-DF

Charter
Expiration(1)

Optional
Period(2)

—
—
—
—
January  2022
March 2022
March 2027
April  2027
July 2027

—
—
—
—
—
—
2030  -  2033
2029 - 2033
2029  -  2033
November  2027 2030 - 2034
2031  - 2035
2032  - 2035
—
2035  -  2041
—
—
2035  -  2038

January  2028
January  2029
May 2021
May  2029
—
September 2031
March  2032

The following table presents information about GasLog  Partners’  fleet and  their associated time

charters  as of March 1, 2021:

Charterer
(for  contracts
Capacity of  more  than

Cargo

Vessel Name

Year  Built

(cbm)

six  months) Propulsion

1 Methane Rita Andrea . . . . . . . .
2 Methane Heather Sally . . . . . . .
3 GasLog Sydney . . . . . . . . . . . .
4 GasLog Seattle . . . . . . . . . . . .
5 Solaris . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
6 GasLog Santiago . . . . . . . . . . .
7 Methane Shirley Elisabeth . . . . .
8 GasLog Shanghai . . . . . . . . . . .
9 Methane Jane Elizabeth . . . . . . .
10 GasLog Geneva . . . . . . . . . . . .
11 Methane Alison Victoria . . . . . .

12 GasLog Gibraltar . . . . . . . . . . .
13 Methane Becki Anne . . . . . . . . .
14 GasLog Greece . . . . . . . . . . . .
15 GasLog Glasgow . . . . . . . . . . .

2006
2007
2013
2013
2014
2013
2007
2013
2006
2016
2007

2016
2010
2016
2016

145,000
145,000
155,000
155,000
155,000
155,000
145,000
155,000
145,000
174,000
145,000

174,000
170,000
174,000
174,000

Spot  Market
Spot  Market
Spot Market
Shell
Shell
Trafigura
JOVO
Gunvor
Cheniere
Shell
CNTIC
VPower
Shell
Shell
Shell
Shell

Steam
Steam
TFDE
TFDE
TFDE
TFDE
Steam
TFDE
Steam
TFDE
Steam

TFDE
TFDE
TFDE
TFDE

52

Charter
Expiration(1)

Optional
Period(2)

—
—
—
June  2021
August2021

—
—
—
—
—

December  2021 2022 -  2028

August 2022
November 2022
March  2023

—
—
2024  -  2025
September 2023 2028 - 2031
2024 - 2025

October 2023

October 2023
March 2024
March 2026
June  2026

2028 - 2031
2027 - 2029
2031
2031

Bareboat Vessels

Vessel Name

Year Built

GasLog Hong Kong(5) . . . . . .
Methane Julia Louise(4) . . . . .
GasLog Houston(6) . . . . . . . .

2018
2010
2018

Indicates the expiration of the initial term.

Cargo
Capacity
(cbm)

174,000
170,000
174,000

Charterer

Propulsion

Charter
Expiration(1)

Optional
Period(2)

Total
Shell
Shell

X-DF
TFDE
X-DF

December 2025
March  2026
May  2028

2028
2029 - 2031
2031  - 2034

The period shown reflects the expiration of the minimum optional period and the maximum optional period. The charterer
of  the GasLog Santiago may extend the term of this time charter for a  period ranging  from one  to  seven  years,  provided
that  the  charterer provides us with advance notice of declaration. The charterer of the Methane Becki Anne and the
Methane Julia Louise has unilateral options to extend the term of  the related  time charters for a period of either three or
five  years  at their election, provided that the charterer provides us with advance notice of declaration of any option in
accordance with the terms of the applicable charter. The charterer of the  GasLog Greece and the GasLog Glasgow has the
right to extend the charters for a period of five years at the charterer’s option. The charterer of the GasLog Geneva and
the GasLog Gibraltar has the right to extend the charter by two additional  periods  of five and  three years, respectively,
provided that the charterer provides us with advance notice of  declaration. The charterer of the GasLog Houston, the
GasLog Genoa and the GasLog Gladstone has the right to extend the charters by two additional periods of three  years,
provided that the  charterer  provides us  with  advance  notice of declaration. The  charterer of  the GasLog Hong Kong has the
right to extend the charter for a period of three years, provided that the charterer provides us with advance notice of
declaration. Endesa has the right to extend the charter of the GasLog Warsaw by two additional periods of six years,
provided that the charterer provides us with advance notice of declaration. The charterer of the GasLog Windsor has the
right to extend the charter by three additional periods of two years, provided that the charterer provides us with advance
notice of declaration. The charterer of the GasLog Wales has the right to extend the charter by two  additional periods of
three years, provided that the charterer provides us  with advance notice of declaration. The charterer of the GasLog
Westminster has the right to extend the charter by three additional  periods  of two  years, provided that the charterer
provides  us with advance notice of declaration. The charterer of  the Methane Alison Victoria may extend the term of the
related charter by two additional periods of one year, provided that the charterer gives us advance notice of its exercise of
any extension option. The charterer of the Methane Jane Elizabeth has the right to extend the term of related charter  by
two additional periods of one year, respectively, provided that the  charterer  gives  us advance notice  of its  exercise of  any
extension option. The charterer of the GasLog Georgetown and the GasLog Galveston has the right to extend the charters
by three  consecutive periods of three years, two  years  and  two years, respectively, each at the charterer’s option.

The vessel  is currently trading in the spot market and has been chartered to Sinolam for the provision of an FSU after the
vessel’s dry-docking and conversion to an FSU.

On October 21, 2020, GasLog’s subsidiary, GAS-twenty five Ltd., completed the sale and leaseback of the GasLog Hong
Kong with  Sea 190 Leasing. GasLog has leased back the vessel  under a  bareboat charter from Sea 190 Leasing for a period
of  up to twelve years. GasLog has the option to re-purchase the vessel on pre-agreed terms no earlier than the end of year
one and no later than the end of year 12 of the bareboat charter. The vessel remains on its charter with Total.

On February 24, 2016, GasLog’s subsidiary, GAS-twenty six Ltd., completed the sale and leaseback of the Methane Julia
Louise with Lepta Shipping. Lepta Shipping has  the  right  to  on-sell and lease back the vessel. The  vessel  was sold  to  Lepta
Shipping  for a total consideration approximately equivalent to its  book value at the time of the sale. GasLog has leased
back the vessel under a bareboat charter from Lepta Shipping for a  period of up to 20 years. GasLog has the option to
re-purchase the vessel on pre-agreed terms no earlier  than the end of year ten and no later than the end of year 17 of the
bareboat charter. The vessel remains on its eleven-year-charter with Methane Services Limited, a subsidiary of Shell.

On January 22, 2021, GasLog’s subsidiary, GAS-twenty four Ltd., completed the sale and leaseback of the GasLog Houston
with Hai Kuo Shipping. GasLog has leased back  the vessel  under a  bareboat charter from Hai Kuo Shipping for a period of
up to eight years. GasLog has the obligation to re-purchase the vessel  at end of the charter period. GasLog has also the
option to re-purchase the vessel on pre-agreed terms no earlier than the end of the first interest period and no later than
the end of  year 8 of the bareboat charter. The vessel remains on its charter with Shell.

1
2
3

(1)

(2)

(3)

(4)

(5)

(6)

Newbuilds

Vessel Name

Expected
Delivery(1)

Cargo
Capacity
(cbm)

Charterer

Propulsion

Charter
Expiration(2)

Optional
Period(3)

1
2

(1)

Hull No. 2311 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Q2 2021
Hull No. 2312 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Q3 2021

180,000 Cheniere
180,000 Cheniere

X-DF
X-DF

2028
2028

2031  -  2035
2031  -  2035

Expected delivery quarters are presented.

53

(2)

(3)

Indicates the expiration of the initial term.

The charterer of Hull Nos. 2311 and 2312 has the right to extend the charters by three consecutive periods of three years,
two years and two years, respectively, each at the charterer’s  option.

Charter Expirations

The GasLog Seattle and the Solaris are due to come off charter in June  and August 2021,

respectively, while the  GasLog Santiago is due to come off charter in December 2021. GasLog  Partners
and GasLog recently secured a new two-year time charter for the  Methane Jane Elizabeth and continue
to pursue opportunities for new term charters with third parties and will trade the  vessels  in the spot/
short-term charter  market, pursuing the  most  advantageous  redeployment  depending on evolving
market conditions.

By  the end of 2020, all six of our Steam vessels had ended their  initial multi-year time  charters

with subsidiaries of Shell, while three additional TFDE vessels will also conclude their multi-year
charters  during 2021. Although we have been successful in finding  longer-term employment for  some of
our  available vessels, this has been concluded  at current market rates, which  are below those achieved
during the initial charters.

Key Fleet Characteristics

The key characteristics of our current  owned and bareboat fleet  include the following:

(cid:127) each ship is sized at between approximately 145,000 cbm  and  180,000 cbm capacity, which places

our  ships  in the medium- to large-size class of LNG  carriers; we believe this size range
maximizes their efficiency and operational flexibility,  as these ships  are compatible with most
existing LNG terminals around the world;

(cid:127) each ship is double-hulled, which is standard  in the LNG industry;

(cid:127) each ship has a membrane containment system incorporating current industry  construction

standards, including guidelines and recommendations  from Gaztransport and Technigaz (the
designer of the membrane system) as well  as updated standards  from  our  classification  society;

(cid:127) each of our ships is equipped with a modern Steam turbine or  has TFDE or X-DF  engine

propulsion technology;

(cid:127) Bermuda is the flag state of each ship with the  exception  of  the GasLog Warsaw which has a

Hellenic flag;

(cid:127) each of our delivered ships has received, and each of our newbuildings is  expected to receive, an
ENVIRO+ notation from our classification society, which denotes  compliance with its published
guidelines concerning the most stringent criteria for  environmental  protection related  to  design
characteristics, management and support systems, sea  discharges and air emissions; and

(cid:127) upon delivery of the last of our two contracted  newbuildings  in 2021, our owned fleet  will have

an average age of 7.0 years, making it one of the  youngest in  the industry, compared to a
current average age of 10 years for the global  trading  LNG carrier fleet including LNG  carriers
of all sizes as of December 31, 2020.

In addition to our owned and bareboat fleet, we  have a 25.0%  ownership interest in Egypt LNG,

an entity whose principal asset is the Methane Nile Eagle. The Methane Nile Eagle is a 145,000 cbm
LNG carrier that was built in 2007. It is currently chartered to MSL under  a 20-year  time charter,
which  is subject to extension for up to 10  years  at the  charterer’s  option.

We  continually evaluate short-term and  multi-year  charter opportunities  for our vessels, including

the newbuildings for which we do not  currently  have charters fixed. Our discussions with potential

54

charterers are at various stages of advancement; however,  we cannot provide assurance  that  we will
conclude any particular charter or, if  concluded, as to the  charter rate  that will apply.

Managed Fleet

Through GasLog LNG Services, we provide technical  ship management services for one LNG
carrier owned by a third party in addition to management of the 32 LNG carriers currently operating in
our  owned and bareboat fleet (the Solaris is managed by a subsidiary of Shell). We supervised the
construction by Samsung or Hyundai of  each LNG carrier in our  managed fleet, and each ship has
operated  under our technical management since its delivery from the shipyard  with the exception of the
Solaris.

The following table provides information  about our managed, third party  owned ship (not

including the bareboat vessels):

Vessel Name

Year Built

Cargo
Capacity (cbm)

Propulsion Ownership

Ship  Owner

GasLog

Charter
Expiration

1 Methane Nile Eagle(1)

. .

2007

145,000

Steam

25.0% Egypt LNG(1)

2027

(1)

The Methane Nile Eagle is owned by Egypt LNG in which we indirectly hold a  25.0% equity interest.  Shell Integrated  Gas
Thailand PTE. Ltd., a subsidiary of Shell, and Eagle Gas Shipping Co. E.S.A., an entity affiliated with the government of
Egypt,  have 25.0% and 50.0% equity interests, respectively, in Egypt LNG.

Ship Time Charters

We  provide the services of our ships  under  time charters. A time charter is a contract for  the use

of the ship for a specified term at a daily  hire rate.  Under a time charter, the  ship  owner provides
crewing and other services related to  the ship’s operation, the  cost of which is covered by the hire  rate,
and the customer is responsible for substantially all of the ship  voyage costs (including bunker fuel,
port charges, canal fees and LNG boil-off).

Our time charters provide for redelivery of the ship to us at the expiration of the term, which may

be extended upon the charterer’s exercise  of its extension  options,  or  upon earlier termination  of the
charter (as described below) plus or minus 30 days.  Under all of  our charters,  the charterer has the
right to extend the term for most periods in which the  ship is off-hire. Our charter contracts do not
provide the charterers with options to purchase our ships during or upon expiration  of  the charter
term.

The following discussion describes the material  terms of the  time  charters for our owned and

bareboat ships.

Initial Term, Extensions and Redelivery

Long-term Market (defined as charter parties with  initial duration of  more  than five years)

The initial term of the time charter for the GasLog Seattle and the Solaris began upon delivery of

the ships following an initial period during which the ships  operated under  maiden voyage time
charters,  the purpose of which was to facilitate completion  by Shell  of an operational  discharge
inspection of the ships. The time charters for the GasLog Seattle and the Solaris will terminate in 2021.

The initial term charter for the  Methane Becki Anne to MSL began upon delivery of the ship and
will terminate in 2024. MSL has options  to extend the  terms of the charter for an additional  period of
either three or five years beyond the initial charter expiration  date. The initial term of the  time charter
for the Methane Julia Louise began upon delivery to GasLog and will terminate in 2026. MSL has  the
option to extend the long-term bareboat charter of the Methane Julia Louise which is now owned by

55

Lepta Shipping and leased back to GasLog,  for an additional period of  either  three or five years
beyond the initial charter expiration date.

The initial term of the time charter for the GasLog Greece, the GasLog Glasgow, the GasLog
Geneva and the GasLog Gibraltar began upon delivery of the ships and will terminate in 2026, 2026,
2023 and 2023, respectively. For the  GasLog Greece and the GasLog Glasgow, MSL has options to
extend the terms of the charters for up  to  five  years  and for the GasLog Geneva and the GasLog
Gibraltar, MSL has the option to extend the terms of the charters for up to 8 years.

The GasLog Houston was delivered from the shipyard in January 2018  and  delivered  into her time

charter with MSL in January 2019. The initial charter term for the ship  will terminate in 2028. MSL
has options to extend the terms of the charter of the GasLog Houston which is now owned by Hai Kuo
Shipping and leased back to GasLog, for  two consecutive periods of three years each,  all  at specified
hire rates.

Our time charter to MSL for the  GasLog Genoa and the GasLog Gladstone began when the ships

were delivered from the shipyard in March 2018 and March 2019, respectively. The initial  charter terms
for the ships will terminate in 2027 and  2029, respectively. MSL  has options  to  extend terms  of  the
charters  for two consecutive periods of three years each, all at  specified hire rates.

Our time charter to Total for the  GasLog Hong Kong began when the ship was delivered from  the
shipyard in March 2018. The initial charter  term will terminate in 2025. Total has  the option  to  extend
the term of the charter of the  GasLog Hong Kong which is now owned by Sea 190 Leasing and leased
back to  GasLog, by a three-year period at  the charterer’s  option at  a specified hire rate.

Our time charters to Centrica for the GasLog Windsor and the GasLog Westminster began when
the ships were delivered from the shipyard in  2020. The initial charter terms will  terminate in 2027.
Centrica has the option to extend the  term of  the charters by three consecutive  periods  of  two years
each  at the charterer’s option.

Our time charter to Jera for the  GasLog Wales began upon delivery of the vessel in 2020. The
initial charter terms will terminate in  2032. Jera has the option  to  extend the term  of the charter by
two consecutive periods of three years.

Our time charters to Cheniere for the GasLog Georgetown and the GasLog Galveston began when
the ships were delivered from the shipyard in  2020 and 2021 respectively and the initial charter  terms
will terminate in 2027 and 2028 respectively. The time charters for Hull Nos. 2311 and 2312 will begin
upon delivery of the vessels from the shipyard in 2021  and the initial  charter terms will terminate in
2028. Cheniere has the option to extend  the term of each  of the  charters  by  three consecutive periods
of three years, two years and two years,  respectively.

Our time charter to Endesa for the  GasLog Warsaw begins in May 2021. The initial charter term

will terminate in 2029. Endesa has the  option to extend the term of the charter  by  two six-year periods
beyond the initial charter expiration date.

Our time charter to Sinolam for the GasLog Singapore begins after the vessel’s dry-docking and

conversion to an FSU for an initial term of ten  years.

Short-term Spot Market (defined as charter parties with  initial duration of  less  than  five years)

Our time charter to Trafigura for the  GasLog Santiago began in August 2018 and the charter will
terminate in December 2021. Trafigura has  various options to extend  the  term of the time charter for
between one and seven years at specified  rates.

Our time charters to Gunvor for the  GasLog Salem and the GasLog Shanghai began in June 2019

and the charters will terminate in 2022.  They have a variable  rate of hire within an agreed  range during
the charter period.

56

Our time charter to JOVO for the  Methane Shirley Elisabeth began in July 2020 and will terminate

in August 2022.

Our time charter to CNTIC VPower  for the  Methane Alison Victoria began in October 2020 and

the charter will terminate in 2023. CNTIC VPower has the option to extend the  term of the charter by
two consecutive periods of one year.

Our time charter to Glencore for the GasLog Chelsea began in November 2020 and the charter

will terminate between January and February 2022.

The initial time charter for the  GasLog Warsaw to Cheniere began when the ship was  delivered  in

August 2019 and will terminate in May 2021. Our time charter to Cheniere for the  Methane Jane
Elizabeth began in December 2020 and the charter will terminate in 2023. Cheniere has the option to
extend the term of the charter by two consecutive periods of one year.

The rates and period for the fixtures  of the Methane Lydon Volney, the GasLog Skagen, the GasLog

Saratoga, the GasLog Singapore,  the GasLog Savannah, the Methane Rita Andrea, the GasLog Sydney
and the Methane Heather Sally vary from charter to charter, as is the nature of  trading in the spot
charter market under contracts of up to six months.

Hire Rate Provisions

‘‘Hire  rate’’ refers to the basic payment from  the customer for use of  the  ship.  Under  all  of  our
time charters, the hire rate is payable  to  us monthly in advance in U.S. dollars. Depending  on the time
charter contract, there are five methods by  which the  daily hire rate for our owned ships is determined:

(cid:127) Under the first method, the hire rate includes two components: a capital cost component and an

operating cost component. The capital cost  component relates to the total  cost of the ship’s
construction and is a fixed daily amount that is  structured to provide a  return  on our invested
capital. Some of the charters provide  for the capital cost  component  to  increase by a specified
amount during any option period. The operating cost component is a fixed daily amount that
may increase annually at a fixed percentage. Although  the daily amount of the operating cost
component is fixed (and potentially subject  to  a specified annual  increase), it  is intended to
correspond to the costs of operating the ship  and  related expenses. In  the event of a  material
increase or decrease in the actual costs we incur in  operating the ship,  a  clause in the charter
provides each party the right in certain circumstances to seek a review  and  potential adjustment
of the operating cost component.

(cid:127) Under the second method, the hire rate includes only one  component  that  is a fivxed daily

amount that will either remain the same, increase or decrease by a specified amount during any
option period as compared to the firm period.

(cid:127) Under the third method, the hire rate for an initial  period of up to two years, at  the charterer’s
option, will be set at the prevailing market rate for  a comparable ship,  subject to a cap  and a
floor. Following such initial period, the hire  rate will  be  calculated based  on three  components—
a capital cost component, an operating  cost component and a ship management fee.  The capital
cost component is a fixed daily amount which will  increase by a specified amount during any
option period. The daily amount of the operating  cost component, which  is intended to fully
pass-through to the charterer the costs  of  operating the  ship, is set annually and adjusted at the
end of each year to compensate us for  the actual costs we incur in operating the ship.
Dry-docking expenses are budgeted in advance and  are reimbursed  by the charterers
immediately following a dry-docking.  The ship  management fee is  a daily amount set in line  with
industry practice for fees charged by ship  managers  and  is intended  to  compensate us for
management of the ship.

57

(cid:127) Under the fourth method, the hire  rate is based on a  base hire  rate adjustment mechanism  for
each  voyage and is calculated by taking the average of the daily  spot  market headline rates of
three broker reports. The three broker  reports used for this calculation shall be drawn from the
week which contains the date that is  twenty (20) days prior to each  loading date. The voyage is
defined as being from drop last pilot at the discharge  port until the drop last pilot  at the next
discharge port. For each voyage, the broker average  daily  rate, shall be subject to certain
adjustments to determine the ‘‘Actual daily  hire rate’’ of that voyage. The hire rate  for each
voyage is subject to maximum ceiling and minimum floor rates.

(cid:127) Under the fifth method, the hire rate is based on a  base hire  rate adjustment mechanism  for

each  voyage and is calculated by taking the average rates  of the BLNG1  (Gladstone to Tokyo),
BLNG2 (Sabine Pass to UK Continent  RV)  and  BLNG3 (Sabine to Tokyo)  routes as published
by Baltic Exchange under Baltic Exchange  Liquefied Natural  Gas Index. If M  is the month in
which  the vessel tenders the Notice of Readiness at a load port, averages of the previous month
M-1 shall be used. The hire rate for each  voyage is subject to maximum ceiling and  minimum
floor rates.

The hire rates for each of our ships may be reduced if  the ship does not  perform  to  certain  of its
specifications or if we breach our obligations under the charter. We have had no instances  of  hire rate
reductions since the first two of our  owned ships  commenced operations in  2010.

Off-Hire

When a ship is ‘‘off-hire’’—or not available for service—a time  charterer generally is  not  required
to pay the hire rate, and we remain responsible for  all costs, including the cost of any  LNG cargo  lost
as boil-off during such off-hire periods. The vast majority  of  our time charters provide  an annual
allowance period for us to schedule preventative maintenance work on the ships, whilst for  some other
charters,  there are other provisions in  place  to  ensure the  same.  For the  vessels operating in  the
short-term spot market we take advantage of any stub period to enable  us to perform the required
maintenance. Our ships are being maintained to the  highest standards  in accordance with the  maker’s
maintenance schedule. A ship generally  will be deemed off-hire  under our time  charters  if there is a
specified time outside of the annual  allowance  period when the ship is  not  available for the charterer’s
use due to, among other things, operational deficiencies  (including the failure to maintain a certain
guaranteed speed), dry-docking for repairs, maintenance  or  inspection, equipment  breakdowns,
deficiency of personnel or neglect of duty  by the ship’s officers  or crew, deviation from course, or
delays due to accidents, quarantines, ship  detentions or similar  problems. We  have obtained loss  of hire
insurance to protect us against loss of income as  a result  of a ship being off-hire.  See ‘‘—Risk  of Loss,
Insurance and Risk Management—Loss  of  Hire  Insurance’’.

All ships are dry-docked at least once every five years for a special survey as required by the ship’s

classification society. Our ships are considered to be on a scheduled off-hire under  our time charters
during such periods.

Termination and Cancellation

Under our existing time charters, each party has  certain termination rights which include, among
other things, the automatic termination  of  a charter upon loss of the relevant  ship.  Either party  may
elect to terminate a charter upon the  occurrence of specified defaults or upon the outbreak  of war or
hostilities involving two or more major nations, such as the United States or the  People’s Republic  of
China, if such war or hostilities materially and adversely  affect the trading of the  ship  for a  period of  at
least 30 days. In addition, our charterers  have  the option  to  terminate  a charter if the relevant  ship  is
off-hire for any reason other than scheduled dry-dockings. The number  of  off-hire days  which trigger
this  option varies dependent on the terms  of  the individual charter parties.

58

In addition to its termination rights, Shell has the  right to convert the time charter with respect to
the relevant ship into a bareboat charter  upon the occurrence of specified defaults or in the event that
Shell’s quality assurance review is not  successfully  completed upon delivery of the  ship.

All of the time charters applicable to  our  newbuildings  permit the  charterer  to  cancel the charter

in the event of a prolonged delay in the delivery  of the ship from the  shipyard, and in certain
circumstances obligate us to pay liquidated damages  to  the charterer in  the event of a less significant
delivery delay. However, the cancellation  and liquidated damages  provisions in  our  charters are
structured to mirror the provisions of  our  contracts with  the shipyard, giving us the  right to receive
liquidated damages from the shipyard or  cancel  the shipbuilding contract  in the same  circumstances
that would trigger the charterer’s right  to  cancel the charter contract or  receive liquidated damages
because of delivery delays.

The Bareboat Charters

On February 24, 2016, GasLog’s subsidiary, GAS-twenty six  Ltd., completed the  sale and leaseback
of the Methane Julia Louise with Lepta Shipping. Lepta Shipping has the  right to on-sell and lease back
the vessel. The vessel was sold to Lepta  Shipping for a total consideration approximately equivalent to
its  book value at the time of the sale. GasLog has leased  back the vessel under a bareboat charter from
Lepta Shipping for a period of up to  20 years. GasLog has the option to re-purchase the vessel on
pre-agreed terms no earlier than the  end of year  ten and no later than the end of year 17 of the
bareboat charter. The vessel remains on  its 11 year  charter with MSL.

On October 21, 2020, GasLog’s subsidiary, GAS-twenty five  Ltd., completed  the sale  and leaseback

of the GasLog Hong Kong with Sea 190 Leasing. The vessel was  sold  to  Sea  190 Leasing. GasLog has
leased back the vessel under a bareboat charter from Sea  190 Leasing  for a period of  up to twelve
years. GasLog has the option to re-purchase the  vessel on  pre-agreed terms no  earlier than  the end of
year one and no later than the end of  year 12 of the bareboat charter. The vessel remains on its
charter with Total.

On January 22, 2021, GasLog’s subsidiary, GAS-twenty four  Ltd., completed the sale and leaseback

of the GasLog Houston with Hai Kuo Shipping. The vessel was  sold  to  Hai Kuo Shipping. GasLog has
leased back the vessel under a bareboat charter from Hai  Kuo Shipping  for a  period of  up to eight
years. GasLog has the option to re-purchase the  vessel  on  pre-agreed terms no  earlier than  the first
Hire Payment Date and no later than  the end  of year 8 of the bareboat charter. The vessel remains on
its  charter with Shell.

Shipbuilding Contracts

As of December 31, 2020, our active shipbuilding contracts with Samsung in  respect of three
newbuildings have an aggregate contract price of approximately $560.3  million.  As of December 31,
2020, the aggregate outstanding balance  was  $466.9 million (which  includes the GasLog Galveston which
was delivered on January 4, 2021), which  will be paid upon  the delivery of each vessel in 2021. All of
our  obligations under the shipbuilding contracts are payable in U.S.  dollars.

As of December 31, 2020, our remaining payment obligations under the  shipbuilding  contracts

were as follows:

Amounts due in less than one year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Total

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

As of
December 31, 2020(1)(2)
(in thousands of
U.S. dollars)
466,930
466,930

(1)

(2)

As of December 31, 2020, $145.8 million is the remaining payment obligation under the shipbuilding contract of
the GasLog Galveston delivered on January  4, 2021.

Instalments of $9.4 million have already been paid in 2021 to date.

59

The shipbuilding contracts provide for the two newbuildings to be delivered  and ready for

immediate operation on various dates in 2021. The third newbuilding, the GasLog Galveston was
delivered on January 4, 2021. The shipbuilding contracts require  Samsung to pay  us liquidated damages
in the event of certain delays in the delivery of a ship unless such delays are attributable to a  force
majeure event and, in the event of a  prolonged delay,  we would have the right  to  cancel the contract
and receive a refund of any installment  payments  previously  made on the ship.

In the event that we fail to meet our payment obligations  under a shipbuilding  contract, we would
be in default under the applicable contract and would be obligated to pay interest under the contract.
If such a default by us were to continue  for more than five business days, the delivery  date of the
applicable ship would be delayed by  one  day for each day that we remain in default and, if a default by
us were to continue for more than 15 business days,  Samsung would have the option of cancelling  the
applicable shipbuilding contract and retaining any installment  payments previously funded by us under
the contract.

Ship Management  Services and Construction Supervision

Except for the Solaris, which is managed by a subsidiary of Shell, management of our owned and
bareboat fleet, which includes plan approval for new ship orders, supervision of ship construction and
planning and supervision of dry-dockings, as  well as  technical  operations, crewing, training,
maintenance, regulatory and classification compliance and  HSSE  management and reporting, is
provided in-house by our wholly owned subsidiary, GasLog LNG Services, an entity incorporated  in
Bermuda with an office in Piraeus, Greece.  In addition to management of our owned  and bareboat
fleet, through GasLog LNG Services we provide technical ship  management services  for the  Methane
Nile Eagle, a ship in which we have a 25.0% ownership interest. During the year ended December 31,
2020, ship management services provided to external  customers accounted for  approximately 0.1% of
our  consolidated revenues.

Construction Supervision

We  supervise and manage the construction of our newbuildings  through GasLog LNG Services. We

have employees on-site in South Korea  whose responsibilities  include inspecting the ships under
construction for non-conformities, attending  trials of the ship and its machinery  and equipment,
consulting with the shipyard in the event  of any modifications to the ship’s  specifications, reviewing the
shipyard’s choice of suppliers and sub-contractors  and keeping our  management informed  of the
progress of the construction. Through GasLog LNG Services, we also supervised the  construction of
three LNG carriers in Shell’s owned  fleet and the Methane Nile Eagle, all of which were constructed at
Samsung.

Technical and Operational Management

Pursuant to ship management agreements, through GasLog  LNG Services  we manage the
day-to-day aspects of ship operations  for our owned  and  bareboat fleet (with  the exception of the
Solaris) and for the  Methane Nile Eagle owned by Egypt LNG. The services  provided include crewing,
training, employing armed guards for  transport  in certain high-risk areas, insurance, maintenance  and
repair, procurement of supplies and equipment,  regulatory and classification compliance and HSSE
management and reporting, as well as dry-docking under certain  charters.  We utilize certain  third-party
sub-contractors and suppliers in carrying  out our  technical management  responsibilities.

In the case of the  Methane Nile Eagle, the crewing and other operational costs  are fully passed-
through to the ship owner, and the customer  pays us a management fee per  month for our technical
management services. In connection with our ship  management services provided  to  the Methane Nile
Eagle, we have entered into a consultant service  agreement pursuant  to  which we provide specialized
services relating to the management of  the LNG carrier. These services  include  the development and

60

installation of a ship’s ship management  system, which  includes installing onboard hardware and
software systems and providing related training to the ship’s personnel. The terms of the Methane Nile
Eagle ship management agreement and related contracts permit the customer  to terminate our services
for any reason upon a short period of advance notice and  both parties have  termination rights upon  the
occurrence of specified defaults. In the event of the  loss of a ship, or the owner’s sale  of a ship to a
third party, the ship management agreement in respect  of  the ship  would terminate automatically.

Competition

We  operate in markets that are highly competitive and  based primarily on  supply and demand.
Generally, competition for LNG time charters is  based primarily on  charter  party terms including price,
ship availability, size, age, technical specifications  and condition, LNG shipping experience, quality and
efficiency of ship operations, including  level of emissions, shipping industry relationships and  reputation
for customer service, and technical ability  and  reputation for operation of highly specialized ships. In
addition, through the GasLog Savannah, the GasLog Singapore, the GasLog Skagen, the GasLog
Saratoga, the GasLog Salem, the GasLog Chelsea, the Methane Lydon Volney and the GasLog Warsaw
and through the GasLog Partners vessels,  the  GasLog Shanghai, the GasLog Santiago, the GasLog
Sydney, the Methane Rita Andrea, the Methane Jane Elizabeth, the Methane Alison Victoria, the Methane
Shirley Elisabeth and the Methane Heather Sally , we operate in the spot charter market that covers
charters  of less than five years.

Although we believe that we are one  of a  small number of large independent owners who focus

primarily on modern, technically advanced LNG carriers, a growing number  of  other independent
shipping companies also own and operate, and in some  cases manage, LNG carriers and have new
ships under construction. Several of these  other  ship owners and managers  have decided to enter,  or to
expand their presence in, the LNG market with newbuilding vessels over the last  year,  and potentially
others may also attempt to participate in the LNG  market  in the  future. A number  of these
newbuildings are uncommitted and may also compete in the  spot/short-term charter market  on delivery.
We  believe that our strategy of focusing  primarily on  charter contracts with  initial terms  of  seven  to  ten
years, as well as the scale of our technical  ship management  operations, differentiates us to some extent
from other independent owners.

In addition to independent owners, some of the major oil  and  gas producers  own LNG carriers
and, in the recent past, have contracted  for the construction of  new LNG  carriers.  Certain national  oil
and gas and shipping companies also have large fleets of LNG carriers that have expanded and may
continue to expand. Some of these companies, as well as other market participants such  as trading
companies who have LNG shipping capacity  contracted on multi-year charters, may  compete with
independent owners by using their fleets to carry LNG for third parties.

Seagoing and Shore-Based Employees

As of December 31, 2020, we had 170 full-time  employees and contractors based  in our offices in

Piraeus, Monaco, London, New Jersey,  Singapore and the newbuildings site  in South Korea. In
addition to our shore-based employees  and contractors,  we  had  approximately  1,866 seafaring staff
serving on our owned and managed ships.  These seafarers are  retained through crewing agencies based
in Ukraine, the Philippines and Spain or, in the case  of  Greek seafarers,  through  direct hire. As we
take delivery of our newbuildings, we expect to recruit a  significant number of  additional seafarers
qualified to staff and operate our new  ships,  as well  as a small number of additional shore-based
personnel. We intend to focus our seafarer hiring efforts  in the  Ukraine, the Philippines  and Spain,
where  we have crewing agency agreements  in place,  and  in Greece.

LNG marine transportation is a specialized area  requiring  technically skilled officers and personnel

with specialized training. Attracting and  retaining motivated, well-qualified seagoing and shore-based
personnel is a top priority, and we offer our  people competitive compensation packages and training

61

and development opportunities. In addition, we provide intensive onboard training  for our officers  and
crews to instill a culture focused on the highest operational  and safety  standards. As a result,  we have
historically enjoyed high retention rates. In 2020, our retention rate was 97%  for senior seagoing
officers, 94% for other seagoing officers  and 97.17% for shore staff.

Although we have historically experienced high employee  retention rates, the demand for

technically skilled officers and crews  to  serve on LNG carriers and  FSRU vessels, and for shore-based
employees with experience of operating and managing LNG  vessels,  has been increasing as  the global
fleet of LNG vessels continues to grow.  This increased demand has  and  may  continue to put
inflationary cost pressure on ensuring  qualified and well-trained crew are available to GasLog.
However, we expect that the impact  of cost increases and increased competition would be mitigated to
some extent by adjustments to the GasLog salary and benefit structure and by certain provisions in
some of our time charters, including automatic periodic  adjustment and cost review provisions.

Classification, Inspection and Maintenance

Every large, commercial seagoing ship must  be  ‘‘classed’’ by a  classification society. The
classification society certifies that the ship  is ‘‘in class’’,  signifying that the ship has  been built  and
maintained in accordance with the rules of  the classification society and complies with applicable rules
and regulations of the ship’s country  of  registry and the international conventions of  which that country
is a member. In addition, where surveys are required by  international conventions and  corresponding
laws and ordinances of a flag state, the classification  society will  undertake them on application or  by
official order, acting on behalf of the  authorities concerned.  The classification society  also undertakes
on request other surveys and checks  that  are  required  by regulations and  requirements  of  the flag  state.
These surveys are subject to agreements made  in each individual case  and/or to the  regulations of the
country concerned.

To ensure each ship is maintained in accordance with  classification society standards  and for
maintenance of the class certificate, regular and  extraordinary surveys  of hull  and machinery, including
the electrical plant, and any special equipment classes are  required to be performed periodically.
Surveys are based on a five-year cycle that  consists of annual surveys, intermediate  surveys that are
typically completed between the second and third  years  of  every five-year cycle, and comprehensive
special surveys (also known as class renewal  surveys)  that  are completed at each  fifth anniversary of the
ship’s delivery.

All areas subject to surveys as defined by the classification  society, are  required to be surveyed  at

least once per five-year class cycle, unless  shorter  intervals between surveys  are mandated.  All ships are
also required to be dry-docked at least  once  during  every  five-year class cycle for  inspection of their
underwater parts and for repairs related to inspections.  If any defects are  found, the classification
surveyor will issue a ‘‘recommendation’’ which must be rectified by  the ship owner within prescribed
time limits. We intend to dry-dock our  ships  at five-year  intervals that coincide with the completion of
the ship’s special survey.

Most insurance underwriters make it  a condition for insurance  coverage  that a ship be certified as
‘‘in class’’ by a classification society that  is a  member  of  the International Association of Classification
Societies. All but two of our delivered  ships are  certified by the  American Bureau  of  Shipping,  or
‘‘ABS’’; the other delivered ships are certified by the Det Norske  Veritas.  Each ship has been awarded
International Safety Management (‘‘ISM’’) certification and is currently ‘‘in class’’. Under our
shipbuilding contracts, all of our contracted newbuildings must be certified prior to delivery  to  us.

62

The following table lists the years in which we  expect to carry out  the next or initial dry-dockings

and special surveys for our owned fleet  and  the bareboat vessels as of  March 1, 2021:

Ship Name

GasLog Singapore . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Methane Rita Andrea . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GasLog Greece . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GasLog Glasgow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GasLog Geneva . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GasLog Gibraltar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GasLog Shanghai
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GasLog Houston . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GasLog Hong Kong . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GasLog Genoa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GasLog Skagen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GasLog Seattle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GasLog Santiago . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GasLog Sydney . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GasLog Gladstone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GasLog Warsaw . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Solaris . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Methane Lydon Volney.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GasLog Saratoga . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Methane Jane Elizabeth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GasLog Windsor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GasLog Westminster . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GasLog Wales . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GasLog Georgetown . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GasLog Galveston . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Methane Alison Victoria . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Methane Shirley Elisabeth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Methane Heather Sally . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Methane Becki Anne . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Methane Julia Louise . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GasLog Savannah . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GasLog Chelsea . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GasLog Salem . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Hull No. 2311 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Hull No. 2312 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Dry-docking
and
Special Survey

2021
2021
2021
2021
2021
2021
2023
2023
2023
2023
2023
2023
2023
2023
2024
2024
2024
2024
2024
2024
2025
2025
2025
2025
2025
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Risk of Loss, Insurance and Risk Management

The operation of any ship has inherent risks. These risks  include mechanical failure, personal
injury, collision, property loss or damage,  ship or cargo loss or damage and business interruption due to
a number of reasons, including mechanical failure, a  cyber event, political  circumstances in foreign
countries, hostilities and labor strikes. In  addition, there is always an inherent possibility  of marine
disaster, including explosion, spills and  other environmental mishaps,  and the liabilities  arising  from
owning and operating ships in international trade.

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We  maintain hull and machinery insurance on  all  our  owned and  bareboat ships against marine

and war risks in amounts that we believe  to  be  prudent to cover such risks, as  well as loss of hire
insurance against loss of income as a  result of a  ship  being  off-hire or  otherwise suffering a  loss of
operational time for events falling under  our  hull and machinery insurance.  In addition, we maintain
protection and indemnity insurance on  all our owned  and bareboat  ships  up to the maximum insurable
limit available at any given time. We also  maintain ship manager insurance  in respect of  our managed
vessel and cyber insurance coverage for  all  our  owned and bareboat ships. While we  believe that our
insurance coverage will be adequate,  not  all  risks can be insured, and there can be no guarantee that
we will always be able to obtain adequate  insurance  coverage  at  reasonable rates  or at  all,  or that any
specific  claim we may make under our  insurance coverage will  be  paid.

Hull  & Machinery Marine Risks Insurance and Hull &  Machinery War Risks Insurance

We  maintain hull and machinery marine risks insurance and hull and machinery war  risks
insurance on our owned and bareboat  ships, which cover  loss of  or  damage to a  ship  due  to  marine
perils such as collisions, fire or lightning, and loss of or  damage  to  a  ship  due  to  war perils such as acts
of war, terrorism or piracy. Each of our  ships is insured under these  policies for  a total amount that
exceeds what we believe to be its fair  market  value. We also maintain hull disbursements and increased
value insurance policies covering each of our owned  ships, which provide additional coverage in the
event of the total or constructive loss  of a  ship. Our marine risks insurance policies contain deductible
amounts for which we will be responsible, but there are no deductible amounts  under our war  risks
policies or our total loss policies.

Loss of Hire Insurance/Delay Insurance

We  maintain loss of hire insurance to protect  us  against  loss of income as  a result of  a ship being
off-hire or otherwise suffering a loss of operational  time for events falling under the terms  of  our  hull
and machinery insurance or hull and machinery/war  risks insurance. Under our loss  of hire policy, our
insurer will pay us the hire rate agreed in  respect  of  each ship  for each day, in  excess  of a certain
number of deductible days, for the time that  the ship  is out of service as a  result of damage, up to a
maximum of 180 days. The number of deductible  days for the ships in  our fleet  is 14 days per ship. In
addition to the loss of hire insurance,  we  also have  in place delay insurance  which, like  loss of hire,
covers all of our owned and bareboat vessels for time  lost due  to  events falling under the terms  of our
hull and  machinery insurance, plus additional protection and indemnity related incidents.  The policy
has a deductible of two days with a maximum  of  12 days (which  brings  it  in line  with the loss of hire
deductible of 14 days) for ship related  perils and with  a maximum of 5 days for shoreside perils. The
hire rate is aligned with the loss of hire  insurance  daily  sum insured and a daily rate per vessel of
$40,000 for our wholly owned and bareboat vessels or the hire rate  agreed as  per  the loss  of hire
insurance policy for the Partnership’s  vessels.

Additionally, we buy war loss of hire and kidnap and ransom insurance  when our ships are  ordered

to sail through the Indian Ocean and Gulf of  Aden to insure  against  potential losses relating to the
hijacking of a ship and its crew by pirates.

Protection and Indemnity Insurance

Protection and indemnity insurance is  typically provided by a  protection and indemnity  association,
or ‘‘P&I  association’’, and covers third-party liability, crew liability and  other related  expenses resulting
from injury to or death of crew, passengers  and  other  third  parties, loss  of or damage  to  cargo, third-
party claims arising from collisions with  other ships (to the extent  not  recovered by the  hull and
machinery policies), damage to other third-party property, pollution  arising from oil  or other substances
and salvage, towing and other related  costs,  including wreck removal.

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Our protection and indemnity insurance covering our owned and bareboat ships is provided  by

P&I associations that are members of the  International Group of Protection and Indemnity Clubs, or
‘‘International Group’’. The 13 P&I associations that  comprise  the International Group insure
approximately 90% of the world’s commercial tonnage  and have  entered into a pooling  agreement to
reinsure each association’s liabilities. Insurance provided by a P&I association is a form of mutual
indemnity insurance.

Our protection and indemnity insurance is currently subject to limits of $3.0  billion per ship per

event in respect of liability to passengers and seamen, $2.0  billion per ship per event in  respect of
liability to passengers and $1.0 billion per ship per event in  respect  of liability for oil pollution.

As a member of a  P&I association, we will be subject to calls, payable  to the  P&I association
based on the International Group’s claim records  as well  as the claim records  of all other members of
the P&I association of which we are  a member.

Cyber Insurance

We  have insurance coverage for cyber related risks. The policy covers physical damage to any  of
our  vessels up to $50.0 million per vessel  with a fleet aggregate limit  of  $150 million for each of the
GasLog and GasLog Partners fleets.

Safety Performance

We  provide intensive onboard training for our officers  and crews to instill  a culture of the  highest

operational and safety standards. During  2020, GasLog’s fleet experienced  1 recordable  injury  and 7
first aid cases.

Permits and Authorizations

We  are required by various governmental and quasi-governmental  agencies  to  obtain  certain
permits, licenses, financial assurances  and  certificates with respect to our  ships. The kinds  of  permits,
licenses, financial assurances and certificates required  will depend  upon several factors, including  the
waters in which the ship operates, the  nationality  of the ship’s crew and the age of the ship. We have
obtained all permits, licenses, financial  assurances and certificates currently required to operate our
ships. Additional laws and regulations, environmental or  otherwise, may be adopted which  could  limit
our  ability to do business or increase  our  cost of doing business.

Environmental and Other Regulation

The carriage, handling, storage and regasification of LNG are subject to extensive laws and
regulations relating to the protection  of  the  environment, health and safety  and other matters. These
laws and regulations include international conventions  and national, state  and local laws and regulations
in the countries where our ships now  or in the future will  operate, or where our ships are registered.
Compliance with these laws and regulations may entail  significant expenses and  may impact the resale
value or useful lives of our ships. Our ships  may  be  subject to both scheduled  and unscheduled
inspections by a variety of governmental, quasi-governmental and private  organizations, including  the
local port authorities, national authorities, harbor  masters or equivalent, classification societies, flag
state administrations (countries of registry) and charterers.  Failure to maintain  permits,  licenses,
certificates or other authorizations required by  some of these entities could require  us to incur
substantial costs or result in the temporary  suspension of the  operation  of  one or more of our ships or
lead to the invalidation of our insurance  coverage reduction.

We  believe that our ships operate in material compliance  with applicable environmental  laws  and

regulations and that our ships in operation have all material permits,  licenses,  certificates  or other
authorizations necessary for the conduct  of our operations. In fact, each of our ships have an

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ENVIRO, an ENVIRO+ or a CLEAN  notation  from our classification societies, which denote
compliance with their published guidelines concerning stringent  criteria for environmental protection
related to design characteristics, management and support  systems,  sea  discharges and air  emissions.
Because environmental laws and regulations  are frequently changed  and may impose increasingly strict
requirements, however, it is difficult  to accurately predict the ultimate cost of  complying with these
requirements or the impact of these requirements  on the  resale value or useful lives of our ships.
Moreover, additional legislation or regulation applicable to the operation of our ships that may  be
implemented in the future could negatively  affect our profitability.

International Maritime Regulations

The IMO, the United Nations agency for maritime safety and the prevention of pollution by ships,

has adopted several international conventions that  regulate  the  international shipping  industry,
including the International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea  (‘‘SOLAS’’), the  International
Convention on Civil Liability for Oil Pollution  Damage, the International Convention on  Civil Liability
for Bunker Oil Pollution Damage, the  International Convention on  Standards of  Training, Certification
and Watchkeeping for Seafarers (‘‘STCW’’)  and  the International Convention  for the  Prevention of
Pollution From Ships (‘‘MARPOL’’). Ships that transport gas, including LNG carriers, are also subject
to regulations under amendments to SOLAS, including the International Safety  Management  Code for
the Safe  Operation of Ships and for Pollution Prevention, or the ‘‘ISM Code’’. The ISM Code requires,
among other things, that the party with  operational  control of a ship  develop an  extensive  safety
management system, including the adoption  of a policy for safety and  environmental protection setting
forth instructions and procedures for operating its ships safely and also describing procedures for
responding to emergencies. We rely on GasLog  LNG Services  for the  development and maintenance of
a safety management system for our ships that meets these requirements. The GasLog  fleet  is also
subject to the International Code for  Construction and  Equipment  of Ships Carrying  Liquefied  Gases
in Bulk (the ‘‘IGC Code’’), which prescribes design and construction standards for ships involved  in the
transport of gas. Compliance with the IGC Code must be evidenced by a Certificate of Fitness for  the
Carriage of Liquefied Gases of Bulk which is issued per vessel.  Non-compliance  with the IGC  Code or
other applicable IMO regulations may subject a ship owner or a bareboat  charterer to increased
liability, may lead to decreases in available insurance coverage for affected ships and may result in the
denial of access to, or detention in, some  ports.

SOLAS is an international maritime law  which sets  minimum safety standards  in the construction,

equipment and operation of merchant ships. The  convention requires  signatory flag states to ensure
that ships flagged by them comply with at least  these standards. The current version of SOLAS is the
1974 version, known as SOLAS 1974, which came  into  force on May 25, 1980.  As of January  2020,
SOLAS 1974 had 164 contracting states,  which flag about  99% of merchant ships around the  world in
terms of gross tonnage. SOLAS in its  successive forms is generally regarded  as the most important of
all international maritime laws concerning the  safety of merchant ships.

STCW, 1978 was adopted on July 7, 1978  and  entered into force  on April 28, 1984.  The  main

purpose of the Convention is to promote safety of life and  property at sea  and the  protection of the
marine environment by establishing in  common agreement  on international  standards of training,
certification and watchkeeping for seafarers. The  Manila  amendments  to  the STCW Convention  and
Code were adopted on June 25, 2010,  marking a major  revision of  the  STCW  Convention and Code.
The 2010 amendments entered into force  on January 1, 2012  under the tacit  acceptance procedure  and
were aimed at bringing the Convention  and Code up  to  date with  developments since  they were
initially adopted and to enable them  to  address  issues that  were anticipated to emerge in the
foreseeable future.

The MARPOL Convention establishes environmental  standards  relating  to  oil leakage or spilling,
garbage management, sewage, air emissions,  handling and disposal  of noxious  liquids and the handling

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of harmful substances in packaged form.  In September 1997, the IMO adopted Annex VI to MARPOL
to address air pollution from ships. Annex VI came  into  force on May  19, 2005.  It sets limits  on sulfur
oxide and nitrogen oxide emissions from ship exhausts and prohibits deliberate  emissions  of ozone
depleting substances, such as chlorofluorocarbons. Annex VI  also includes a  global cap on  the sulfur
content of fuel oil and allows for special areas to be established with more  stringent controls on sulfur
emissions. Annex VI has been ratified  by many, but not all, IMO member states. In October  2008, the
Marine Environment Protection Committee, or ‘‘MEPC’’, of the  IMO  approved amendments to
Annex VI regarding particulate matter,  nitrogen oxide and  sulfur oxide  emissions standards. These
amendments became effective in July 2010. These  requirements establish  a series of progressive
standards to further limit the sulfur content in  fuel oil, (which phased in  between 2012 and 2020), as
well as new tiers of nitrogen oxide emission standards for new marine diesel  engines, depending on
their date of installation. As of January  1,  2020, ships must either use low  sulfur fuel oil  (potentially
including undertaking necessary fuel tank modification) to comply with a global  sulfur cap  of
0.5 percent m/m or be fitted with exhaust  gas scrubbers. Additionally,  more stringent emission
standards could apply in coastal areas designated as Emission  Control Areas,  or ‘‘ECAs’’. For example,
IMO ‘‘Tier III’’ emission standards for  nitrous oxide apply in North American and U.S.  Caribbean  Sea
ECAs to all marine diesel engines installed  on a  ship constructed  on  or  after January 1, 2016. The
European Union Directive 2005/EC/33, which became effective on January  1, 2010, parallels Annex VI
and requires ships to use reduced sulfur  content fuel for their main and  auxiliary engines. Our owned
ships currently in operation comply with  the relevant legislation and  have the  relevant certificates
including certificates evidencing compliance with  Annex  VI of the MARPOL  Convention.

Although the United States is not a  party, many  countries have ratified the International

Convention on Civil Liability for Oil Pollution  Damage, 1969, as amended, or  the ‘‘CLC’’. Under this
convention a ship’s registered owner  is strictly  liable for pollution damage caused in  the territorial
waters of a contracting state by discharge of persistent oil,  subject under  certain circumstances to
certain defenses and limitations. Ships carrying more  than 2,000  gross tons of oil, and  trading to states
that are parties to this convention, must  maintain evidence  of  insurance  in an amount covering the
liability of the owner. In jurisdictions where  the CLC has not been adopted, various  legislative  schemes
or common law impose liability either on the  basis of fault or  in a manner similar to the  CLC. P&I
Clubs in the International Group issue the required Bunker  Convention (defined below) ‘‘Blue  Cards’’
to provide evidence of insurance meeting the  liability  requirements. Where  applicable, all of  our vessels
have received ‘‘Blue Cards’’ from their P&I Club and are in possession of a  CLC State-issued
certificate attesting that the required  insurance coverage is in force.

The IMO also has adopted the International Convention  on Civil Liability  for Bunker Oil
Pollution Damage, or the ‘‘Bunker Convention’’, which imposes liability on  ship  owners for pollution
damage  in jurisdictional waters of ratifying states caused by  discharges  of  bunker fuel and requires
registered owners of ships over 1,000 gross tons to maintain insurance for  pollution damage in an
amount equal to the limits of liability  under the applicable national or international  limitation regime.
We  maintain insurance in respect of  our owned ships that satisfies these requirements.  Non-compliance
with the ISM Code or other IMO regulations may subject  a shipowner or bareboat  charterer to
increased liability, may lead to decreases  in  available insurance coverage for affected ships and may
result in the denial of access to, or detention in,  some ports,  including ports in the United  States and
Europe.

The Maritime Labour Convention (MLC)  2006 was adopted by the International Labour

Conference at its 94th (Maritime) Session  (2006), establishing  minimum working  and living conditions
for seafarers. The convention entered into force August 20, 2013, whilst amendments were approved by
the International Labour Conference at  its 103rd Session (2014). The convention  establishes  a single,
coherent instrument embodying all up-to-date  standards of existing international maritime labour

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conventions and recommendations, as well as the  fundamental principles  to  be  found in other
international labour conventions.

United States

Oil Pollution Act and CERCLA

Our operations are subject to the OPA,  which establishes an extensive regulatory and liability
regime for environmental protection  and  cleanup of oil spills, and the  Comprehensive Environmental
Response, Compensation and Liability  Act, (‘‘CERCLA’’), which imposes liability on owners and
operators of ships for cleanup and natural resource damage from the release  of hazardous  substances
(other than oil). Under OPA, ship owners,  operators and bareboat charterers are responsible parties
who are jointly, severally and strictly liable (unless the spill  results solely from the act or omission of a
third party, an act of God or an act of war) for all containment  and clean-up costs and other damages
arising from oil spills from their ships.  As  of November 12,  2019, OPA  currently  limits the liability of
responsible parties with respect to ships over 3,000 gross tons to the greater of  $2,300 per gross ton or
$19,943,400 per double hull ship and  permits individual  states  to  impose their own  liability  regimes with
regard to oil pollution incidents occurring  within their boundaries. Some states have enacted  legislation
providing for unlimited liability for discharge of pollutants within their waters. Liability under CERCLA
is limited to the greater of $300 per  gross  ton  or $5.0 million for ships carrying a  hazardous substance
as cargo  and the greater of $300 per  gross  ton  or $0.5 million for any  other ship.

These limits of liability do not apply under certain circumstances, however, such  as where the
incident is caused  by violation of applicable U.S. Federal safety,  construction  or operating regulations,
or by the responsible party’s gross negligence or willful misconduct. In  addition,  a marine  incident that
results in  significant damage to the environment could result in amendments to these limitations  or
other regulatory changes in the future.  We maintain the maximum  pollution liability coverage amount
of $1  billion per incident for our owned ships. We  also believe that we will be in substantial  compliance
with OPA, CERCLA and all applicable state regulations in the ports where our ships will call.

OPA also requires owners and operators of ships over 300 gross tons  to  establish  and maintain

with the National Pollution Fund Center of the U.S. Coast Guard evidence of financial responsibility
sufficient to meet the limit of their potential strict  liability under the act. Such financial responsibility
can be demonstrated by providing a guarantee from an appropriate guarantor, who  can release  the
required guarantee to the National Pollution Fund  Center  against payment of the requested  premium.
We  have purchased such a guarantee  in order to provide evidence of financial  responsibility and  have
received the mandatory certificates of  financial responsibility from the U.S. Coast Guard in  respect of
all of our delivered ships and we intend to obtain such certificates  in the future for  each  of our  vessels,
if they are required to have them.

Clean Water Act

The U.S. Clean Water Act of 1972, (the ‘‘CWA’’), prohibits the  discharge of oil,  hazardous
substances and ballast water in U.S. navigable  waters unless authorized  by  a duly-issued permit or
exemption, and imposes strict liability in the  form of penalties for any  unauthorized discharges. The
CWA also imposes substantial liability for the  costs of removal,  remediation and damages and
complements the remedies available  under  OPA  and  CERCLA. Furthermore,  most U.S. states that
border a navigable waterway have enacted environmental pollution laws that  impose strict liability on a
person for removal costs and damages resulting from a  discharge of oil or a release  of  a hazardous
substance. These laws may be more stringent than  U.S. Federal  law.

The United States Environmental Protection  Agency,  (the ‘‘EPA’’), has  enacted rules requiring
ballast water discharges and other discharges incidental to the normal operation of certain ships  within
United States waters to be authorized under the  Ship General Permit for  Discharges Incidental to the

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Normal Operation of Ships, (the ‘‘VGP’’).  To  be  covered by  the  VGP, owners of certain ships must
submit a Notice of Intent, (‘‘NOI’’),  at least  30 days before the ship  operates in United States  waters.
Compliance with the VGP could require the installation of equipment  on our ships to treat ballast
water before it is discharged or the implementation  of  other disposal arrangements, and/or  otherwise
restrict our ships from entering United  States  waters. In March  2013, the EPA  published a new VGP
that includes numeric effluent limits for ballast water  expressed  as the maximum  concentration of living
organisms in ballast water. The VGP  also  imposes a variety of  changes for non-ballast water discharges
including more stringent Best Management Practices for discharges of oil-to-sea interfaces in  an effort
to reduce the toxicity of oil leaked into U.S. waters. The  2013 VGP was  issued with an  effective period
of December 19, 2013 to December 18,  2018. The Vessel Incidental Discharge Act, (‘‘VIDA’’),  enacted
on December 4, 2018, requires the EPA  and  Coast Guard to develop new  performance standards  and
enforcement regulations and extends  the 2013  VGP provisions until new regulations  are final  and
enforceable. We have submitted NOIs for  our fleet and intend  to  submit  NOIs for  our  ships  in the
future, where required, and do not believe that the  costs associated with obtaining and complying with
the VGP will have a material impact on  our  operations.

Clean Air Act

The U.S. Clean Air Act of 1970, as amended by the Clean Air Act  Amendments of 1977 and 1990,

(the ‘‘CAA’’), requires the EPA to promulgate standards  applicable  to  emissions of volatile organic
compounds and other air contaminants.  Our ships may be subject to vapor  control and  recovery
requirements for certain cargoes when loading, unloading,  ballasting, cleaning and conducting other
operations in regulated port areas and emission standards for so-called ‘‘Category 3’’ marine diesel
engines operating in U.S. waters. The  marine  diesel engine emission  standards are currently limited to
new engines beginning with the 2004 model year. On April 30, 2010,  the EPA adopted final  emission
standards for Category 3 marine diesel engines equivalent to those adopted in the amendments to
Annex VI to MARPOL. However, our  TFDE LNG carriers have  the ability to burn  natural gas  as fuel
to power the ship, which can significantly reduce relevant  emissions compared with steam-powered
ships.

The CAA also requires states to adopt State Implementation Plans, (‘‘SIPs’’),  designed to attain

national health-based air quality standards in  primarily major metropolitan  and/or industrial areas.
Several SIPs regulate emissions resulting  from ship  loading  and unloading operations by requiring  the
installation of vapor control equipment.  The  MEPC has designated as an ECA the area  extending 200
miles from the territorial sea baseline adjacent to the  Atlantic/Gulf and  Pacific  coasts and the eight
main Hawaiian Islands and the Baltic  Sea, North Sea and Caribbean Sea, under the Annex VI
amendments. Fuel used by vessels operating in the ECA cannot exceed 0.1%  (mass by mass) sulfur.  As
of January 1, 2016, NOx after-treatment requirements  also apply. Our vessels can store and burn
low-sulfur fuel oil or alternatively burn natural gas which  contains no  sulfur. Additionally, burning
natural gas will ensure compliance with  IMO  Tier III  NOx emission limitations without  the need for
after-treatment. Charterers must supply compliant fuel for the  vessels  before ordering vessels to trade
in areas where restrictions apply. As  a  result, we  do  not expect such restrictions  to  have a materially
adverse impact on our operations or  costs.

Other  Environmental Initiatives

U.S. Coast Guard regulations adopted under the U.S. National Invasive Species Act, (‘‘NISA’’),

impose mandatory ballast water management practices for all  ships equipped  with ballast  water tanks
entering U.S. waters, which could require the  installation  of  equipment on  our  ships  to  treat ballast
water before it is discharged or the implementation  of  other port facility disposal  arrangements or
procedures, and/or otherwise restrict our  ships from entering U.S. waters. In June 2012, the  U.S. Coast
Guard rule establishing standards for  the  allowable concentration  of  living  organisms  in ballast water
discharged in U.S. waters and requiring the phase-in of Coast  Guard approved  ballast water

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management systems, (‘‘BWMS’’), became effective. The  rule requires installation of Coast  Guard
approved BWMS by new vessels constructed  on or  after December 1, 2013  and existing vessels as of
their first dry-docking after January 1, 2016.  Several  states have  adopted legislation  and regulations
relating to the permitting and management of ballast water discharges.

At the international level, the IMO adopted an International  Convention for the Control  and
Management of Ships’ Ballast Water  and  Sediments in  February 2004, (the ‘‘BWM Convention’’).  The
BWM Convention’s implementing regulations  call for a phased  introduction  of mandatory  ballast water
exchange requirements, to be replaced  in  time with mandatory  concentration limits. The  threshold
ratification requirements for the convention to enter into  force were met in 2016, and  the convention
became effective on September 8, 2017. All our newly delivered ships from 2016  onwards have
compliant equipment installed. We have selected one manufacturer to supply  the required  equipment
to be installed at the first dry-dock of all remaining ships. The programme  and required funds have
been included in our future planning  to  ensure the  fleet  remains compliant at all times.

Our vessels may also become subject  to the International Convention on Liability and

Compensation for Damage in Connection with the Carriage of Hazardous and Noxious Substances by
Sea, 1996 as amended by the Protocol to the  HNS Convention, adopted  in April 2010, (‘‘HNS
Convention’’), if it is entered into force.  The HNS Convention creates a regime  of  liability  and
compensation for damage from hazardous  and noxious substances, (‘‘HNS’’), including a two-tier
system of compensation composed of  compulsory  insurance taken out  by  shipowners and  an HNS Fund
which  comes into play when the insurance is  insufficient to satisfy  a claim or does not cover the
incident. To date, the HNS Convention  has not been ratified by a  sufficient number  of countries to
enter into force.

Greenhouse Gas Regulations

The MEPC of IMO adopted two new sets of mandatory requirements to address  greenhouse gas

emissions from ships at its July 2011 meeting. The Energy Efficiency  Design  Index  requires a minimum
energy efficiency level per capacity mile and is applicable to new vessels,  and the  Ship Energy
Efficiency Management Plan is applicable  to currently operating  vessels.  The requirements,  which
entered into force in January 2013, were fully implemented by GasLog as  of December  31, 2012. The
IMO is also considering the development of a market-based mechanism for greenhouse  gas emissions
from ships, but it is difficult to predict  the likelihood  that such a standard might be adopted or its
potential impact on our operations at  this time.

Further the MEPC 75 of IMO adopted two  other sets of amendments to the Marpol Annex VI

related to Carbon intensity regulations.  The Committee agreed  on combining  the technical  and
operational measures with entry into  force dates on  January 1,  2023. The Energy Efficiency Existing
Ships Index (EEXI) will be implemented for existing ships as technical measure  to  reduce CO2
emissions. The Carbon Intensity Index  (CII) will be implemented as an operational carbon intensity
measure to benchmark and improve efficiency. Regulations and  framework  will  be  fully defined at the
next MEPC meeting in June 2021 and  will be reviewed by  January 1, 2026.

The European Union has indicated in  the past that it intends  to  propose  an expansion  of the
existing European Union emissions trading scheme to include  emissions of greenhouse gases from
marine ships. The EU MRV Regulation  (Monitoring, Reporting, Verification), entered into force on
July 1, 2015, requires large vessels entering European Union  ports  to  monitor, report and verify their
carbon dioxide emissions as of January 1, 2018. In the United  States, the EPA has adopted  regulations
under the CAA to limit greenhouse gas emissions from  certain mobile  sources, although  these
requirements do not currently apply to greenhouse  gas emissions from ships. In addition, the IMO has
established a  framework for reducing global greenhouse gas emissions from shipping by at  least  40% by
2030 and pursuing efforts towards 70%  by 2050,  compared to 2008 with the goal  of  holding  the
increase in global average temperature to well below 2 degrees Celsius and pursuing efforts to limit  the

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increase to 1.5 degrees Celsius. Although  the Paris Agreement  does not specifically require controls  on
shipping or other industries, it is possible that countries or groups of countries  will seek  to  impose such
controls in the future. Any passage of climate  control legislation or other regulatory initiatives  by  the
IMO, the European Union, the United  States or  other  countries where we  operate,  or any  treaty
adopted or amended at the international level that restricts  emissions of greenhouse gases, could
require us to make significant expenditures that  we cannot  predict with certainty at this time.

We  believe that LNG carriers, which have the inherent ability to burn natural  gas to power the

ship, and in particular LNG carriers like certain of our  vessels  that utilize fuel-efficient diesel electric
and low pressure two-stroke propulsion, can  be  considered among the cleanest of  large ships in terms
of emissions and very adaptable to the  usage  of newly developed lower and/or zero emission fuels.

Ship Security Regulations

A number of initiatives have been introduced in recent  years  intended to enhance ship security.

On November 25, 2002, the Maritime Transportation Security Act of 2002,  (‘‘MTSA’’), was signed into
law. To implement certain portions of the  MTSA,  the U.S. Coast Guard issued regulations in July 2003
requiring the implementation of certain security requirements aboard ships operating in  waters subject
to the jurisdiction  of the United States. Similarly, in December 2002, amendments to SOLAS  created a
new chapter of the convention dealing specifically with maritime  security. This new chapter came  into
effect in July 2004 and imposes various detailed security  obligations on  ships and  port  authorities, most
of which are contained in the newly created International Ship  and Port Facilities Security Code, or
‘‘ISPS Code’’. Among the various requirements are:

(cid:127) on-board installation of automatic information systems to enhance ship-to-ship and ship-to-shore

communications;

(cid:127) on-board installation of ship security alert systems;

(cid:127) the development of ship security plans; and

(cid:127) compliance with flag state security  certification requirements.

The U.S. Coast Guard regulations, intended to align  with international maritime security
standards, exempt non-U.S. ships from MTSA  ship security measures, provided such  ships  have on
board a valid ‘‘International Ship Security  Certificate’’ that attests to the ship’s compliance with  SOLAS
security requirements and the ISPS Code. We have implemented  the  various security measures required
by the IMO, SOLAS and the ISPS Code  and  have approved ISPS certificates and plans certified  by  the
applicable flag state on board all our ships.

C. Organizational Structure

GasLog is a holding company incorporated in Bermuda. As of March 1, 2021, it has 51  subsidiaries

which  are incorporated in the British  Virgin Islands, Monaco, Bermuda, the Marshall Islands, the
United States, Singapore, Cyprus, Greece, Panama and England and Wales.  Of our subsidiaries, 32
either own vessels in our fleet or are  parties to contracts to obtain newbuild vessels. Of our
subsidiaries, 34 are wholly owned by us and 17  are 35.3% owned by  us. A list of our subsidiaries is set
forth in Exhibit 8.1 to this annual report.

D. Property, Plant and Equipment

Other than our ships, we do not own any material  property.  Our vessels are subject to priority
mortgages, which secure our obligations under our  various credit facilities. For information on our
vessels, see ‘‘Item 4. Information on  the  Company—B. Business Overview—Our Fleet’’. For further
details regarding our credit facilities, refer  to  ‘‘Item 5. Operating  and Financial Review and Prospects—
B. Liquidity and Capital Resources—Credit Facilities’’.

71

We  occupy office space at 69 Akti Miaouli, Piraeus, GR 18537,  Greece,  which we  lease through

our  subsidiary, GasLog LNG Services, from  an entity controlled by Ceres Shipping; the lease
agreement is disclosed and filed with the  Greek authorities, and has been entered into at market rates.
We  also occupy office space at (i) 99  Kings Road, London  SW3 4PA, United  Kingdom, which we lease
through our subsidiary, GasLog Services  UK Ltd.;  (ii)  ~24-02B Asia Square Tower  2, Singapore,  which
we lease through our subsidiary, GasLog  Asia PTE.  Ltd.; and  (iii) 89 Hudson Street, Suite 406,
Hoboken, Hudson County, New Jersey  07030, USA which we lease  through  our  subsidiary, GasLog
Services U.S. Inc.

For more information about the contractual arrangements  for our  office space in Piraeus, see

‘‘Item 7. Major Shareholders and Related Party Transactions—B. Related Party Transactions’’.

ITEM 4.A. UNRESOLVED STAFF COMMENTS

Not applicable.

ITEM 5. OPERATING AND FINANCIAL REVIEW AND PROSPECTS

The following discussion of our financial condition and results of  operations should be read in

conjunction with the financial statements  and the  notes  to those  statements included elsewhere in this
annual report. This discussion includes forward-looking statements  that  involve risks and uncertainties. As a
result of many factors, such as those set forth  under  ‘‘Item 3. Key  Information—D.  Risk Factors’’ and
elsewhere in this annual report, our actual results  may differ  materially from  those anticipated in these
forward-looking statements. Please see the section  ‘‘Forward-Looking Statements’’ at the  beginning of this
annual report.

We are an international owner, operator and manager of LNG carriers. As of March 1, 2021, our
wholly owned fleet consists of 17 LNG carriers, including  15 ships in operation and two  LNG carriers
on order at Samsung. GasLog is also  the general  and  controlling  partner in GasLog Partners, which
owns 15 LNG carriers. In addition, GasLog  has leased back under a bareboat charter i) for a period of
up to 20 years one vessel sold to Lepta  Shipping in February 2016;  ii) for a  period of  up to 12 years
one vessel sold to Sea 190 Leasing in  October 2020; and iii) for a period of up  to  eight years one vessel
sold to Hai Kuo Shipping in January 2021. We currently manage and operate 33 LNG  carriers
including 15 of our wholly owned vessels in operation, 14  ships  contributed  or sold to the Partnership
(the Solaris is managed by a subsidiary of Shell), the three  bareboat vessels and one additional LNG
carrier in which we have a 25.0% interest.  We  are also  supervising the  construction of our
newbuildings. As of March 1, 2021, 17  of our owned  and bareboat vessels (including  seven  of the 15
vessels owned by GasLog Partners) and  two of our newbuild  vessels  currently  operate  or will operate
under long-term time charters (defined  as those with initial  duration of more than five years), and 16
of our vessels (including eight vessels  owned by GasLog Partners) are currently trading in the
short-term spot market (defined as contracts  with  initial duration of less than five years). As of
December 31, 2020, our contracts are expected to provide  total contracted revenue of $3.5 billion
during their initial terms, which expire  between 2021  and  2032.

The additional LNG carrier in which  we also  have  a 25.0% interest is the Methane Nile Eagle, a

2007-built LNG carrier owned by Egypt LNG and technically managed by us.  It is currently operating
under a 20-year time charter to a subsidiary of Shell.  The information about our  owned fleet presented
in this report does not include our ownership interest in the Methane Nile Eagle.

We  generate revenues by chartering our ships to customers on multi-year time  charters and
short-term charters and by providing technical ship management services, including crewing, training,
maintenance, regulatory and classification compliance and  HSSE  management and reporting through
our  wholly owned  subsidiary GasLog LNG Services. The Group’s chief  operating decision maker, being

72

the Chief Executive Officer, reviews the  Group’s  operating results  on  a  consolidated basis  as one
operating segment.

Industry Overview and Trends

Energy Prices

As referenced in ‘‘Item 3. Key Information—Risk Factors’’, oil  prices, as  measured by the spot

price of Brent crude oil, experienced  continued volatility during 2020,  trading within a range  of
approximately $19 per barrel to $69  per  barrel. During 2020, oil prices were  pressured for much  of the
year by lower demand following the COVID-19 pandemic,  particularly for transportation  related oil
products such as jet fuel. In response, members of the  Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries
(‘‘OPEC’’) reduced output of crude oil  and a record number of oil drilling rigs  were idled in the
United States. After reaching a bottom  point  of $19 per barrel in March, oil prices have  recovered by
168% and ended the year at approximately  $52 per barrel as  oil production cuts and  a favorable
economic outlook following the distribution  of several COVID-19  vaccines  around the world  have
worked to balance the market. In early 2021,  spot oil  prices have  continued  to  recover. As of
February 25, 2021 Brent crude oil was quoted at approximately $65 per barrel compared to $52 per
barrel at December 31, 2020 and $56 per barrel at the same time last year.

Similarly, global natural gas prices were  under sustained pressure  for most of 2020. Natural gas
prices in the import regions of Europe, as measured  by  the Title Transfer  Facility  (‘‘TTF’’), averaged
$3.25 per million British Thermal Units  (‘‘MMBtu’’)  in 2020  while in  Asia, the Japan Korea Marker
(‘‘JKM’’) averaged $4.22 per MMBtu. Both hit multi-year lows during  the year.  Meanwhile,  gas prices
in the United States, as measured by the  Henry  Hub (‘‘HH’’)  benchmark,  averaged $2.13  per  MMBtu
and also reached multi-year lows during  the summer.  Global gas prices  were  impacted  by  lower
industrial demand following the COVID-19 pandemic,  particularly during the  second  and third
quarters, as well as increasing gas production in export markets such  as the United States. In addition,
a warmer than average 2019/20 winter in the Northern Hemisphere kept  inventories  in Europe and
parts of Asia above their 5-year averages  to start the year and  the start-up of new  LNG export  capacity
during 2020 and the ramp up of facilities which began production in  2019 added new supply to the
market.

Beginning late in the third quarter, TTF and JKM rose strongly ahead of the  winter season in the
Northern Hemisphere and ended 2020 at their highest levels of the year,  $6.87 per MMBtu  and $14.30
per  MMBtu, respectively. The rise in import  prices in Northern Asia and Europe  was driven by a
colder than average start to the winter  season, supply  outages  in LNG  production facilities, particularly
in Australia and Norway, and delays at  the Panama Canal which diverted  some shipments of LNG to
Asia around the Cape of Good Hope, adding additional delivery time. The recovery in  LNG prices
continued into the start of 2021 where JKM reached over $30  per  MMBtu in  early January,  setting a
new all-time record.

International gas prices have moderated since the beginning of 2021 as procurement for the

Northern Hemisphere winter wanes; however, import prices remain well above the levels observed
during the same period in 2020. As of February 25, 2021, natural gas prices were quoted at
approximately $5.67 per MMBtu for TTF compared to $2.88 per MMBtu at the same time last year
and at approximately $5.80 per MMBtu for JKM compared to $2.90 per MMBtu at the same time last
year. By contrast, the price recovery of spot Henry Hub in the U.S., has been less dramatic, quoted at
$2.76 per MMBtu as of February 25, 2021 compared to $1.83 at the same time last year.

While the majority of LNG volumes are sold under long-term contracts with  prices linked to the
price of crude oil, we believe that the difference  in delivered gas prices between import markets in Asia
and the Atlantic Basin and export costs  from  the U.S.  is a significant driver of spot LNG trade, as the
differential incentivizes natural gas marketers and buyers to ship LNG over  longer distances. The

73

recent rise in Asian and European gas  prices  referenced above  have resulted in  a differential  currently
wide enough to incentivize inter-basin trade and gas price futures imply that the inter-basin arbitrage
opportunity may exist periodically in coming months and years, potentially  leading  to  longer voyages for
LNG cargoes and, all else equal, increasing the  demand for spot LNG shipping.

LNG Supply

According to Wood Mackenzie, global seaborne  trade of LNG  was  365 million tonnes  (‘‘mt’’) in

2020, an increase of 1% over 2019. During the year, new production capacity started in the  United
States at Cameron Trains 2 and 3,Freeport Train  3 and Corpus Christi Train 3  as well as Elba Island.
Supply from existing liquefaction facilities in Russia also increased. Meanwhile, downtime and/or
underperformance at existing facilities in  Australia and Norway partially offset these gains. In addition,
the COVID-19 pandemic, combined  with  low import  prices in Europe  and Asia,  saw the cancellation of
approximately 15 mt of supply during the second and  third  quarters  of 2020, primarily out of the US
and Egypt.

LNG supply is projected to rise 4% to  approximately  385 mt in  2021, according to Wood
Mackenzie. This expected growth is driven  by the ramp-up of new supply commissioned in  2020 and
new capacity scheduled to come on stream in 2021.  In  addition, current forward  curves  for natural gas
and LNG as well as a rebound in global oil prices and global economic  activity following the
COVID-19 pandemic, indicate fewer cargo cancellations, particularly out of the  US, in the shoulder
months of the second and third quarters  of 2021.

During 2020, only one new LNG liquefaction project, Sempra Energy’s Costa Azul LNG project in

Mexico, capacity of approximately 3.25 mtpa reached Final Investment Decision (‘‘FID’’), the lowest
amount of new capacity in 22 years. As  of  February 25, 2021,  one  project  has reached  FID in 2021,
Qatar’s North Field Expansion Project  which was  sanctioned  on  February 8, 2021.  The project
anticipates the construction of 4 new trains with a combined capacity of 33 mtpa. Should any further
projects take FID, incremental LNG  shipping  capacity is likely to be required  to  transport the LNG
produced by these projects. Nonetheless,  there  can be no assurance  that any  of  these  projects  will take
FID or, if one or more FIDs are taken,  that  incremental shipping will be  contracted  or that GasLog
will be successful in securing renewed or new charters at attractive rates and durations  to  meet such
LNG shipping requirements.

LNG Demand

According to Wood Mackenzie, LNG  demand increased by 1%,  to  354 mt in  2020 from 350  mt in

2019. China accounted for much of the growth, adding demand for approximately 7 mt  in 2020, an
increase of 11% over 2019. Indian demand  grew by 3 mt or 13% in  2020 to approximately 25 mt  while
demand from Turkey was up 1.7 mt or  19%.  Meanwhile  demand  from Japan, Northwest  Europe  and
South Korea declined by 3 mt, 1mt and  1 mt, respectively, declines of 4%,  3% and 2% over
2019.During 2020, 37 mtpa of long-term (defined as greater than 5 years duration)  off-take
commitments have been agreed, according to Wood Mackenzie,  a positive  indicator for  future LNG
demand.

Wood  Mackenzie forecasts global LNG demand growth of  over 88 mt between 2021 and  2026, a

compound annual growth of approximately 4%. This growth  is expected to be broad-based, with South
East Asia (excluding India) accounting  for approximately 65% and China, Latin America and India
expected to account for 26%, 5% and  9%, respectively.

LNG Shipping Rates and Chartering Activity

In the LNG shipping spot market, TFDE headline rates, as  reported by  Clarksons, averaged
$59,000 per day in 2020, a 16% decrease  year-on-year. Low gas prices during much  of 2020 limited the

74

arbitrage opportunity for transporting  LNG between the  Atlantic and Pacific  basins, particularly in the
first 9 months of the year. However, the market balance  tightened in  the fourth  quarter  of  2020, as
evidenced by the sharp increase in TFDE  headline  rates to an annual peak  of  $145,000 per day in
December, following a marked decrease  in spot ship availability. According to Poten, 54  term charters
between 12 months and seven years were  reported in 2020,  a  decrease of 14% over 2019, of  which 24
were for TFDE vessels and 13 were for  Steam vessels. The term charter market  for Steam vessels
continues to be significantly less liquid  than that for TFDEs.

Clarksons assesses headline spot rates for TFDE and Steam LNG carriers at $46,500 per day and

$30,000 per day, respectively as of February 19, 2021. The COVID-19 pandemic continues to create
uncertainty regarding near-term demand  for LNG. In  addition, spot rates may be prone to further
periods of seasonality and volatility similar  to  those seen  in recent years. Accordingly, there  is no
guarantee that LNG shipping spot rates will stay at  or near  current levels or return to the  levels
experienced in the fourth quarters of  the last three years, which could  harm our business, financial
condition, results of operations and cash  flows, including cash  available for  distributions to unitholders.

Delays to the start-up, or unexpected  downtime,  of LNG supply  projects  or significant  further

orders of  new LNG carriers may weaken the  supply/demand balance  for  LNG shipping. Reduced
demand for LNG or LNG shipping, or  any reduction or limitation in LNG production capacity, or
significant increases in LNG shipping  capacity, could have a material adverse effect on our ability to
secure future time  charters at attractive  rates and durations for new  ships we may order or acquire,  or
upon expiration or early termination  of our current charter  arrangements,  which could harm our
business, financial condition, results of operations and cash flows,  including  cash available for
distributions to unitholders, as well as our ability  to  meet  certain of our debt covenants. A sustained
decline  in charter rates could also adversely  affect the  market  value  of our  ships,  on which certain of
the ratios and financial covenants with  which we are required to comply are  based.

Global LNG Fleet

According to Poten, as of February 26, 2021, the global fleet of dedicated LNG carriers (>100,000

cbm) consisted of 538 vessels with another 112 LNG carriers on order, of which 86 vessels (or 77%)
have multi-year charters. Poten estimates that a total of 44 LNG carriers are due to be delivered in the
remainder of 2021, with 13 of these in the remainder of the first half of the year. In 2020, 35 orders for
LNG carriers were placed, as estimated by Poten.  Newbuild ordering saw  a decline relative  to  2019 and
2018. We believe that the growing global demand for natural gas,  especially in Asia,  increasing  supply
from the U.S. and other regions, and other LNG market trends, including  increased trading of LNG,
should support the existing order backlog for vessels and should also drive a  need for additional LNG
carrier newbuildings. Finally, the scrapping of older and less efficient vessels, the conversion of  existing
vessels to FSRUs or FSUs and/or employing LNG carriers for short-term storage purposes in order to
exploit arbitrage opportunities could  reduce the availability of LNG carriers  on the  water today.
However, various factors, including changes  in prices of and demand for LNG, can  materially affect  the
competitive dynamics that currently exist and there  can be no assurance  that  this  need for additional
carriers will materialize or that GasLog will be successful  in securing renewed  or new  charters at
attractive rates and durations to meet such LNG shipping requirements.  The statements in  this
‘‘Industry Overview and Trends’’ section  are forward-looking statements  based on management’s  current
expectations and certain material assumptions  and,  accordingly, involve risks and uncertainties that
could cause actual results, performance  and outcomes to differ  materially from those  expressed  herein.
See ‘‘Item 3. Key Information—D. Risk  Factors’’ of this annual report.

75

A. Operating Results

Factors Affecting Our Results of Operations

We  believe the principal factors that  will affect our future results  of  operations include:

(cid:127) the supply and demand for LNG shipping services and  the number of vessels available in the

short-term or spot LNG carrier charter market;

(cid:127) the number of LNG carriers in our owned and managed fleets;

(cid:127) the timely delivery of our ships under construction;

(cid:127) our ability to obtain acceptable financing in respect  of  our capital and refinancing commitments;

(cid:127) our ability to maintain good working relationships  with our existing  customers  and our ability to
increase the number of our customers through  the development of new working  relationships;

(cid:127) the performance of our charterers;

(cid:127) the supply-demand relationship for  LNG  shipping services, including the impact of greater

competition in the LNG shipping market  and  the impact  of the COVID-19  virus on demand  for
LNG and LNG shipping;

(cid:127) our ability to employ the ships we  own  and the  bareboat vessels, that currently do not have

charters  at economically attractive rates;

(cid:127) the effective and efficient technical  and operational  management of our ships;

(cid:127) our ability to maintain the recruitment and retention of appropriately qualified  seafarers and

shore staff;

(cid:127) our ability to obtain and maintain regulatory approvals and to satisfy  technical, health, safety  and

compliance standards that meet our customers’  requirements;  and

(cid:127) economic, regulatory, political and governmental  conditions that affect the LNG market and

LNG shipping industries, which include geopolitical  factors such as the imposition of trade tariffs
and changes in the number of new LNG importing countries and regions, as  well as structural
LNG market changes impacting LNG  supply and  demand.

In addition to the general factors discussed above, we believe certain specific factors have

impacted, or will impact, our results of operations. These factors include:

(cid:127) the hire rate earned by our owned  ships, including any of our ships  that  may trade in  the

short-term or spot market if we are unable to secure  new  term  charters;

(cid:127) unscheduled off-hire days;

(cid:127) the fees we receive for technical ship  management services;

(cid:127) the level of our ship operating expenses, including  the costs of crewing, insurance and

maintenance;

(cid:127) our level of debt, the related interest expense  and the  timing of required payments  of  principal;

(cid:127) mark-to-market changes in derivative financial instruments and foreign currency fluctuations; and

(cid:127) the level of our general and administrative expenses,  including salaries and  costs of consultants.

See ‘‘Item 3. Key Information—D. Risk  Factors’’ for a discussion of certain risks  inherent in our

business.

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Principal Components of Revenues and Expenses

Revenues

Our revenues are driven primarily by the number of LNG carriers in our owned  fleet, the amount
of daily charter hire that they earn under time charters and the number of operating  days during which
they generate revenues. These factors, in turn, are affected by our decisions relating  to  ship  acquisitions
and disposals, the amount of time that our ships spend in  dry-dock undergoing repairs,  maintenance
and upgrade work, the age, condition and technical specifications  of  our ships  as well as  the relative
levels of supply and demand in the LNG carrier charter market. Under the terms of some  of our  time
charter arrangements, the operating cost component of  the daily  hire rate is intended  to  correspond  to
the costs of operating the ship. Accordingly, we will receive additional  revenue under  certain of our
time charters through an annual escalation  of  the operating  cost component of the  daily  hire rate and,
in the event of more material increases  in  a ship’s operating costs, we may be entitled to receive
additional revenues under those charters. Under some of the other time charter arrangements, most of
our  operating costs are passed-through  to  the charterer in the  form of an  adjustment  to  the operating
cost component of the daily hire rate.  We believe these adjustment  provisions provide  substantial
protection against significant operating cost increases. See ‘‘Item 4. Information on the Company—
B. Business Overview—Ship Time Charters—Hire  Rate  Provisions’’ for  a more detailed discussion of
the hire rate provisions of our charter  contracts.

The table below provides additional  information  about our contracted charter revenues  based on

contracts in effect as of December 31, 2020 for (a) our wholly owned  fleet, the 15  ships in the GasLog
Partners’  fleet, the bareboat vessels for which  we have secured  time charters and (b)  our two
newbuildings on order. Other than the  assumptions  reflected in the  footnotes  to  the table, including
our  assumption that our newbuildings  are  delivered on schedule,  the table does not reflect events,
including charter party agreements signed or  amended, occurring  after December 31, 2020.  The table
reflects only our contracted charter revenues for the ships in our owned fleet and bareboat fleet for
which  we have secured time charters,  and it does  not reflect the costs or  expenses we will incur in
fulfilling our obligations under the charters,  nor does  it include other revenues  we may earn, such as
revenues for technical management of customer-owned ships. In particular, the  table  does not reflect
any revenues from any additional ships we may acquire in  the future; nor does it reflect the options
under our time charters that permit our charterers to extend the time charter terms for  successive
multi-year periods. The entry into new  time charter contracts for the ships  that  are trading  in the spot
market and any additional ships we may  acquire, or the  exercise of options extending the terms of our
existing charters, would result in an increase in  the number  of  contracted  days and the contracted
revenue for our fleet in the future. Although the  contracted  charter  revenues are  based on contracted
charter hire rate provisions, they reflect certain assumptions, including  assumptions relating to future
ship operating costs. We consider the assumptions  to  be  reasonable as  of  the date of  this report,  but if
these assumptions prove to be incorrect,  our  actual time charter  revenues could differ from those
reflected in the table. Furthermore, any  contract is  subject to various risks,  including performance by
the counterparties or an early termination  of  the contract pursuant to its terms. If  the charterers are
unable or unwilling to make charter  payments to us, or  if  we  agree  to  renegotiate charter  terms at  the
request of a charterer or if contracts are prematurely terminated for any  reason, we would be exposed
to prevailing market conditions at the  time and our  results of operations and financial condition may
be materially adversely affected. Please see ‘‘Item 3. Key Information—D. Risk Factors’’. For these
reasons, the contracted charter revenue  information presented below is  not fact and  should not be
relied upon as being necessarily indicative of future  results and  readers are  cautioned not to place
undue reliance on this information. Neither  the Company’s independent auditors,  nor any  other
independent accountants, have compiled, examined  or performed  any procedures  with respect to the
information presented in the table, nor have they  expressed any opinion  or any  other  form of assurance

77

on such information or its achievability, and assume no responsibility for, and  disclaim any association
with, the information in the table.

Contracted Charter Revenues and Days  from  Time Charters as of December  31, 2020

Contracted Charter Revenues and Days  from  Time Charters

Contracted time charter revenues(1) . . . .
Total contracted days(1) . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Total available days(2)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Total unfixed days(3)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Percentage of total contracted days/total
available days . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

For the Year Ending December 31,

2021

2022

2023

2024

2025 - 2032

Total

(in millions of U.S. dollars, except days  and percentages)

$ 606.3
9,244
12,176
2,932

$ 568.7
8,232
12,775
4,543

$ 521.6
7,036
12,535
5,499

$ 445.7
5,887
12,660
6,773

$1,347.4
18,151
100,590
82,439

$3,489.7
48,550
150,736
102,186

75.9% 64.4% 56.1% 46.5%

18.0%

32.2%

(1)

(2)

(3)

Reflects time charter revenues and contracted days for our wholly owned ships, the 15 ships owned by the Partnership, the
bareboat vessels and three newbuildings on order for  which we  have secured time charters. Does not include charter
revenues for the Methane Nile Eagle, in which we hold a 25.0% minority interest.  Contracted revenue calculations  assume:
(a) 365 revenue days per annum, with 30 off-hire days when the ship  undergoes scheduled dry-docking (every five years);
(b) all LNG carriers on order are delivered on schedule; and  (c) no exercise of any option to extend the terms of charters.
For  time  charters that include a fixed operating cost component subject to annual escalation, revenue calculations include
that fixed annual escalation. For time charters that give the charterer the option to set the charter hire rate at prevailing
market rates during an initial portion of the time  charter’s term, revenue calculations assume that the charterer does not
elect such  option. Revenue calculations for such charters include an estimate of the amount of the operating cost
component and the management fee component. For time charters that are based on a variable rate of hire within an
agreed range during the charter period, the lower end  of the range is used for this calculation.

Available days represent total calendar days after deducting 30 off-hire days when the ship undergoes scheduled
dry-docking. The available days for the vessels operating in the spot/short-term market are included.

Represents available days for ships after the expiration of existing charters (assuming charterers do not exercise any option
to extend  the terms of the charters) and the available days for the vessels operating in the spot/short-term market.

The revenues of GasLog LNG Services, our wholly  owned subsidiary, are driven  primarily by the

number of ships operating under our technical management and the amount of the  fees  we earn  for
each  of these ships as well as the amount of fees that  we may earn for plan  approval and  construction
supervision of newbuilding LNG carriers. In addition  to  revenues from external customers, GasLog
LNG Services receives revenues for technical  management, plan approval and construction supervision
services provided to our owned fleet,  which  are eliminated  on consolidation.

Revenue from vessel management and vessel construction  project supervision contracts is

recognized when earned and when it is  probable  that future  economic benefits will flow to the Group
and such a benefit can be measured reliably.

Net Pool Allocation

In relation to the vessels participating in the Cool  Pool  (until July 2019, when GasLog exited  the
Cool Pool), net pool allocation represents  GasLog’s  share of  the  net revenues earned from the  other
pool participants’ vessels less the other participants’ share of the net  revenues  earned by GasLog’s
vessels included in the pool. Each participant’s share  of  the net pool revenues is based on the number
of pool points attributable to its vessels and the number  of  days such  vessels  participated  in the pool.

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Voyage Expenses and Commissions

Under our time charter arrangements, charterers bear  substantially  all voyage  expenses, including

bunker fuel, port charges and canal tolls, but not commissions, which we have historically paid  to
unaffiliated ship brokers based on a  flat fee  per  ship.  Commissions are recognized as  expenses on a pro
rata basis over the duration of the period  of the  time charter.

Vessel operating costs and voyage expenses  and  commissions  are  expensed as  incurred, with the

exception of commissions, which are recognized on a pro-rata  basis over the duration of  the period  of
the time charter. Bunkers consumption  represents mainly bunkers consumed during vessels’
unemployment and off-hire.

Vessel Operating and Supervision Costs

We  are generally responsible for ship operating expenses,  which include  costs for crewing,
insurance, repairs, modifications and maintenance, including dry-docking,  lubricants, spare parts and
consumable stores and other miscellaneous expenses, as well as the associated cost of providing these
items and services. However, as described  above, the hire rate provisions of  our  time charters are
intended to reflect the operating costs  borne by us. Certain of our charters contain  provisions that
significantly reduce our exposure to increases in  operating costs, including  review provisions  and cost
pass-through provisions. Ship operating expenses  are recognized  as expenses when  incurred.

In addition, we pay fees to GasLog LNG Services in connection with our own newbuildings on
order for plan approval and construction  supervision  services provided by GasLog  LNG Services and to
cover third-party expenses incurred by GasLog LNG Services in respect  of  the newbuildings.  These
fees, other than any intercompany profit, are capitalized as  part of  the asset value of our ships. The
fees paid for technical ship management  services, which are considered vessel operating and supervision
costs of our owned fleet (and corresponding  revenues of  GasLog LNG Services), are eliminated on
consolidation.

Vessel operating and supervision costs  of GasLog LNG Services  include staff costs, such as
salaries, social security and training for the  technical  management team  and project specialists,  and
project-related expenses.

Depreciation

The majority of our consolidated depreciation expenses relate to the cost of our ships. We

depreciate the cost of our ships on the basis of  two components: a vessel component and a dry-docking
component. The vessel component is depreciated on  a straight-line basis over the expected useful life
of each ship, based on the cost of the ship less its estimated residual  value. We estimate the  useful lives
of our ships to be 35 years from the date  of  delivery from the  shipyard. Secondhand vessels are
depreciated from the date of their acquisition  through their  remaining estimated useful  life.
Management estimates residual value  of its  vessels  to  be  equal to the product of its lightweight tonnage
(‘‘LWT’’), and an estimated scrap rate per LWT,  which represents our estimate of the market value of
the ship at the end of its useful life.  We review scrap  rates  on an  annual basis.

We  must periodically dry-dock each of our ships for inspection, repairs  and  maintenance and any

modifications to comply with industry  certification  or governmental requirements. All  our ships  are
required to be dry-docked for these inspections at  least once every  five  years. At the  time of  delivery of
a ship, we estimate the dry-docking component of the cost  of the ship, which represents the estimated
cost of the ship’s first dry-docking based  on our historical experience with similar types  of ships. The
dry-docking component of the ship’s cost  is  depreciated over five years, in case of new ships, and until
the next dry-docking for secondhand ships, which is performed within  five  years  from the vessel’s last

79

dry-docking unless we determine to dry-dock the ships at an earlier date.  In the event a  ship  is
dry-docked at an earlier date, the unamortized  dry-docking component is  written  off immediately.

General and Administrative Expenses

General and administrative expenses  consist principally  of  personnel costs for  administrative and
support staff, board of directors fees,  expense recognized in connection with share-based  compensation,
rent, utilities, travel expenses, legal expenses,  information  and  computing equipment  and services,  other
professional services and consultants, training for crew familiarization and other advisor costs. In
addition, general and administrative expenses include restructuring costs  comprising of termination
benefits, accelerated amortization for  stock plan and restructuring obligations, pursuant  to
management’s decision to relocate more  of  its  employees including  several members of  senior
management to the Piraeus, Greece office  and to close the  Stamford, Connecticut office.

Impairment Loss on Vessels

All vessels are reviewed for impairment  whenever  events or changes in circumstances indicate that

the carrying amount of an asset may not  be  recoverable. Whenever the  carrying amount of a vessel
exceeds its recoverable amount, an impairment loss is recognized in the  consolidated  statement  of
profit or loss. The recoverable amount is  the  higher of a vessel’s fair value less cost  of  disposal and
‘‘value in use’’. The fair value less cost of  disposal is the  amount  obtainable from the  sale of  a vessel in
an arm’s length transaction less the costs of disposal, while ‘‘value in use’’ is the  present  value of
estimated future cash flows expected  to  arise from  the continuing use  of  a vessel and  from its  disposal
at the end of its useful life. Recoverable  amounts  are estimated for individual vessels.  Each vessel is
considered to be a single cash-generating  unit. The  fair value less  cost of disposal of the  vessels  is
estimated from market-based evidence  by appraisal that  is normally undertaken by professionally
qualified brokers.

Financial Costs

We  incur interest expense on the outstanding indebtedness  under our existing  credit facilities,
bonds and our swap arrangements that qualify for  treatment as cash flow hedges for financial  reporting
purposes, which we include in our financial costs. Financial costs also include  amortization  of other
loan issuance costs incurred in connection with establishing our credit facilities. We will incur additional
interest expense and other borrowing  costs  in the future on  our outstanding borrowings and under  the
undrawn or future borrowings and commitments. For a description  of  our credit  facilities,  including our
loan agreements and sale and leaseback  agreements, see ‘‘Item 5.  Operating and  Financial Review and
Prospects—B. Liquidity and Capital Resources—Credit Facilities’’.

Interest expense and the amortization of loan  issuance  costs that relate  directly to a  specific loan

to finance an LNG carrier under construction and are incurred  during the construction period are
capitalized as part of the cost of the  ship. Otherwise,  interest expense and amortization of loan
issuance costs are expensed as incurred.

Financial Income

Financial income consists of interest  income, which  will  depend on the level of our cash  deposits,

investments and prevailing interest rates.  Interest income is recognized on an  accrual  basis.

(Loss)/Gain on Derivatives

(Loss)/gain on derivatives consist of the ineffective portion of changes  in the fair value of the
derivatives that meet hedge accounting  criteria, net interest on derivative financial  instruments held  for
trading, the movement in the fair value of  the derivative  financial  instruments  that  have not been
designated as hedges and the amortization of the cumulative unrealized loss for the derivative contracts
in respect of which hedge accounting was  discontinued.

80

Share of Profit of Associates

The share of profit of associates consists of our share of profits  from (a)  our  25.0% ownership

interest in Egypt LNG, a Bermuda exempted company whose principal asset is the  LNG carrier
Methane Nile Eagle and (b)  our 20.0% ownership in Gastrade, a Greek private limited company
licensed to develop an independent natural gas system  offshore Alexandroupolis in  Northern Greece
utilizing an FSRU along with other infrastructure.

Results of Operations

Year Ended December 31, 2019 Compared to Year  Ended  December 31, 2020

Year ended December 31,

2019

2020

Change

Amounts are in thousands of U.S. Dollars
Revenues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Net pool allocation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Voyage expenses and commissions . . . . . . . . . . . .
Vessel operating and supervision costs . . . . . . . . .
Depreciation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
General and administrative expenses . . . . . . . . . .
Loss on disposal of non-current assets . . . . . . . . .
Impairment loss on vessels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

$ 668,637
(4,264)
(23,772)
(139,662)
(168,041)
(47,385)
—
(162,149)

$ 674,089
—
(21,883)
(148,235)
(177,213)
(47,249)
(572)
(28,627)

$

5,452
4,264
1,889
(8,573)
(9,172)
136
(572)
133,522

Profit from operations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

123,364

250,310

126,946

Financial costs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Financial income . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Loss on derivatives . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Share of profit of associates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

(190,481)
5,318
(55,441)
1,627

(165,281)
726
(84,658)
2,192

25,200
(4,592)
(29,217)
565

Total other expenses, net . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

(238,977)

(247,021)

(8,044)

(Loss)/profit for the year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

(115,613)

3,289

118,902

Non-controlling interests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

(14,952)

48,237

63,189

Loss attributable to owners of the Group . . . . . .

$(100,661) $ (44,948) $ 55,713

During  the year ended December 31,  2019,  we had an average of 27.2 ships  operating in our
owned and bareboat fleet (including ships  owned by the Partnership), having 9,518  revenue operating
days and an average of 27.2 ships operating  under our technical management  (including 27.0 of  our
owned and bareboat ships). During the year ended December 31,  2020, we had an average  of 30.1 ships
operating in our owned and bareboat fleet (including  ships  owned by the Partnership), having 10,031
revenue operating days and an average  of 30.1 ships operating under  our technical management
(including 29.1 of our owned and bareboat ships).

Revenues: Revenues increased by 0.8%, or $5.5 million, from $668.6  million during the year ended

December 31, 2019 to $674.1 million during  the year  ended December  31, 2020.  The increase in
revenues is mainly attributable to an  increase of  $76.8 million deriving from the  full operation  of  the
GasLog Gladstone on March 15, 2019 and the GasLog Warsaw on July 31, 2019 and the deliveries of
the GasLog Windsor, the GasLog Wales, the GasLog Westminster and the GasLog Georgetown on
April 1, 2020, May 11, 2020, July 15, 2020 and November 16,  2020, respectively.  These deliveries
resulted in an increase in revenue operating days. This increase was  partially  offset by a  decrease of
$45.0 million from the Partnership’s fleet,  mainly attributable to the expirations of the initial multi-year
time charters of the  Methane Jane Elizabeth, the Methane Alison Victoria, the Methane Rita Andrea, the

81

Methane Shirley Elisabeth and the 18-month time charter of the  GasLog Sydney (which had higher rates
compared to their current contracted rates) and also due to increased off-hire days for scheduled
dry-dockings. There was also a decrease of $27.8 million, mainly attributable  to  the performance of  our
remaining vessels operating in the spot  market.  As a result,  the average  daily hire rate decreased from
$70,167 for the year ended December 31,  2019 to $67,120 for the year  ended December  31, 2020.

Vessel Operating and Supervision Costs: Vessel operating and supervision costs increased by 6.1%,
or $8.5 million, from $139.7 million during the year ended December 31,  2019 to $148.2 million during
the year ended December 31, 2020. The increase in  vessel operating and supervision  costs is primarily
attributable to the increase in ownership  days  due to the  deliveries of  the GasLog Windsor, the GasLog
Wales, the GasLog Westminster and the GasLog Georgetown on April 1, 2020, on May 11, 2020, on
July 15, 2020 and November 16, 2020, respectively, partially offset by  the  decrease in daily  operating
costs from $14,595 per ownership day  (as defined below excluding the Solaris managed by Shell) for the
year ended December 31, 2019 to $13,975 per ownership day (as defined below excluding the Solaris
managed by Shell) for the year ended December 31, 2020.  Ownership  days represent total calendar
days for our owned and bareboat fleet.  Daily operating costs per vessel decreased mainly due to the
decreased scheduled technical and maintenance costs  as a  result  of  management’s operating  cost
initiatives during 2020 and decreased insurance costs,  partially offset  by the unfavorable movement  of
the Euro (‘‘EUR’’)/U. S. Dollar (‘‘USD’’)  exchange rate in  the year  ended December 31, 2019  as
compared to the year ended December 31, 2020.

Depreciation: Depreciation increased by 5.5%, or $9.2 million, from  $168.0  million  during the year
ended December 31, 2019 to $177.2 million during the  year ended December 31, 2020. The increase in
depreciation resulted mainly from the increase in  the average number of vessels in our  fleet in year
ended December 31, 2020, compared to the  prior year and the  increase from the  depreciation of  the
right-of-use assets, which were partially offset by the impairment charges  recognized in the  prior year
and  the year end December 31, 2020.

General and Administrative Expenses: General and administrative expenses decreased by 0.4%, or
$0.2 million, from  $47.4 million during  the year ended  December  31, 2019  to  $47.2 million during the
year ended December 31, 2020, before  adjusting  for restructuring costs. General  and administrative
expenses include the effect of the restructuring costs of $4.7 million and $5.3 million for  the year ended
December 31, 2019 and 2020, respectively. Daily general and administrative expenses decreased from
$4,770 per vessel ownership day for the  year ended December 31, 2019  to $4,306 per vessel ownership
day for the year ended December 31, 2020, which includes  restructuring costs  of  $473 and $484 per
vessel ownership day in 2019 and 2020, respectively. The decrease in  absolute  terms is  mainly
attributable to the reduced travel and  accommodation expenses, mainly due to the COVID-19  related
travel restrictions imposed during 2020 and reduced employee  costs,  which were  partially  offset by
increased legal costs of $1.0 million associated with the  Transaction  incurred as of December  31, 2020,
as well as $0.5 million legal costs and professional expenses associated with the  Strategic  Review at
GasLog Partners level, the increased costs of directors and  officers insurance, the  increase in foreign
exchange losses and the increased restructuring  costs.

Impairment Loss on Vessels:

Impairment loss on vessels was $162.1 million for the year ended

December 31, 2019 and $28.6 million  for the  year ended December 31, 2020. The impairment loss for
the year ended December 31, 2019 was recognized with  respect to the Partnership’s Steam vessels (the
Methane Rita Andrea, the Methane Jane Elizabeth, the Methane Alison Victoria, the Methane Shirley
Elisabeth and the Methane Heather Sally) and the Steam vessel owned by GasLog (the  Methane Lydon
Volney), as a result of the impairment assessment  performed by the Group for the entire fleet after
concluding that events and circumstances  triggered the existence of  potential impairment  of its  vessels
as of  December 31, 2019. The impairment loss recorded for the year ended  December 31,  2020 was
recognized with respect to one Steam  vessel  owned by GasLog (the  Methane Lydon Volney) and four

82

vessels owned by the Partnership (the  Methane Rita Andrea, the Methane Shirley Elisabeth, the Methane
Alison Victoria and the Methane Heather Sally), as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic which  placed
downward pressure on economic activity  and energy demand, as well as significant uncertainty
regarding future near-term LNG shipping demand and, therefore  LNG  shipping requirements.

Financial Costs: Financial costs decreased by 13.2%, or $25.2 million, from $190.5 million during

the year ended December 31, 2019 to  $165.3  million during the year ended  December 31,  2020. The
decrease in financial costs is mainly attributable to a  net decrease of $27.7  million in interest  expense
on loans, bonds and cash flow hedges due primarily to a decrease in LIBOR rates during the year
ended December 31, 2020 compared to the  same period  in 2019. Specifically, during the year ended
December 31, 2020, we had an average of $3,428.2 million  of  outstanding indebtedness, with  a weighted
average interest rate of 3.7%, while during  the year  ended December  31, 2019, we had  an average of
$3,072.0 million of outstanding indebtedness, with a weighted  average  interest rate of 5.1%.  These
weighted average interest rates include  interest expense on loans and cash flow hedges and interest
expense on bonds and CCSs. In addition,  there  was  a decrease  of $5.5 million in  other financial  costs
mainly due to the unrealized foreign exchange losses  on cash and bond incurred in  the previous year, a
decrease of $0.6 million in finance lease charges and a decrease of  $0.1 million  in loss  arising  on bond
repurchases at premium, partially offset by an increase of $8.7 million deriving mainly from  the
write-off of fees relating to the refinancings  and  the sale  and  leaseback transaction  that  took place
during the year.

Loss on  Derivatives: Loss on derivatives increased by $29.3 million, from a loss  of $55.4 million  for

the year ended December 31, 2019 to a loss of $84.7 million for the year  ended December 31,  2020.
The increase  is mainly attributable to a decrease of $24.0  million in realized gain  from interest rate
swaps held for trading, the increase of $10.0 million in loss from marked-to-market valuation of our
derivative financial instruments carried at fair value  through  profit  or  loss, which reflected a loss of
$54.0 million for the year ended December 31, 2019,  as compared  to  a  loss  of $64.0 million for the year
ended December 31, 2020, and an increase of $0.2  million in the ineffective portion  of cash  flow
hedges, partially offset by a decrease of $4.3  million  in realized  loss on  forward foreign  exchange
contracts held for  trading and a decrease  of $0.7 million in  recycled loss of cash  flow hedges
reclassified to profit or loss.

(Loss)/profit for the Year: Loss for the year decreased by $118.9  million,  from a  loss of

$115.6 million for the year ended December  31, 2019 to a  profit of $3.3 million for the year ended
December 31, 2020 as a result of the aforementioned factors.

Loss Attributable to Owners of the Group: Loss Attributable to Owners of the Group  decreased  by

$55.8 million, from a loss of $100.7 million for the year ended December 31, 2019  to  a loss  of
$44.9 million for the year ended December  31, 2020. The decrease in  loss attributable to the  owners of
GasLog resulted mainly from the respective movements in loss mentioned above.

83

Year  Ended December 31, 2018 Compared to  Year Ended December  31, 2019

Year ended December 31,

2018

2019

Change

Amounts are in thousands of U.S. Dollars
Revenues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Net pool allocation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Voyage expenses and commissions . . . . . . . . . . .
Vessel operating and supervision costs . . . . . . . .
Depreciation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
General and administrative expenses . . . . . . . . .
Impairment loss on vessels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

$ 618,344
17,818
(20,374)
(128,084)
(153,193)
(41,993)

$ 668,637
(4,264)
(23,772)
(139,662)
(168,041)
(47,385)
— (162,149)

$ 50,293
(22,082)
(3,398)
(11,578)
(14,848)
(5,392)
(162,149)

Profit from operations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

292,518

123,364

(169,154)

Financial costs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Financial income . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Loss on derivatives . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Share of profit of associates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

(166,627)
4,784
(6,077)
1,800

(190,481)
5,318
(55,441)
1,627

(23,854)
534
(49,364)
(173)

Total other expenses, net . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

(166,120)

(238,977)

(72,857)

Profit/(loss) for the year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

126,398

(115,613)

(242,011)

Non-controlling interests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

78,715

(14,952)

(93,667)

Profit/(loss) attributable to owners of the Group

$ 47,683

$(100,661) $(148,344)

During  the year ended December 31,  2018,  we had an average of 26.0 ships  operating in our
owned and bareboat fleet (including ships  owned by the Partnership), having 9,030  revenue operating
days and an average of 25.5 ships operating  under our technical management  (including 25.0 of  our
owned and bareboat ships). During the year ended December 31,  2019, we had an average  of 27.2 ships
operating in our owned and bareboat fleet (including  ships  owned by the Partnership), having 9,518
revenue operating days and an average  of 27.2 ships operating under  our technical management
(including 27.0 of our owned and bareboat ships).

Revenues: Revenues increased by 8.1%, or $50.3 million, from $618.3 million during the year
ended December 31, 2018 to $668.6 million during the  year ended December 31, 2019. The increase in
revenues is mainly attributable to an  increase of  $63.4 million deriving from the  full operation  of  the
GasLog Houston, the GasLog Hong Kong and the GasLog Gladstone which were delivered on
January 8, 2018, March 20, 2018 and March  29, 2018, respectively and the  deliveries of the GasLog
Gladstone on March 15, 2019 and the GasLog Warsaw on July 31, 2019. These deliveries resulted in an
increase in revenue operating days. In addition, there was an increase of $11.0 million  from our vessels
trading in the spot and short-term market  including the impact of the unscheduled dry-dockings of the
GasLog Savannah, the GasLog Singapore and the GasLog Chelsea and an increase of $2.7 million from
the remaining fleet. The above increases were partially  offset by  a decrease  of  $26.1 million from the
expiration of the initial time charters of the GasLog Shanghai, the GasLog Santiago, the GasLog Sydney,
the GasLog Skagen, the GasLog Saratoga and the Methane Jane Elizabeth and a decrease of $0.7 million
due to increased off-hire days from the  remaining vessels. The average daily hire rate increased from
$68,392 for the year ended December 31,  2018 to $70,167 for the year  ended December  31, 2019.

Net Pool Allocation: Net pool allocation decreased by $22.1 million, from a positive $17.8  million

during the year ended December 31, 2018 to a negative $4.3 million  during the year ended
December 31, 2019. The decrease in  net pool  allocation was attributable to the  movement in the
adjustment of the net pool results generated by the GasLog vessels in  accordance with the  pool

84

distribution formula for the total fleet  of the  pool, as well  as GasLog’s vessels  exiting the Cool  Pool in
June and July 2019. GasLog recognized  gross revenues and gross voyage expenses and commissions of
$45.3 million and $8.1 million, respectively,  from the operation of its vessels in  the Cool Pool  during
the year ended December 31, 2019 (December 31,  2018: $102.3  million  and $10.2 million,  respectively).
GasLog’s total net pool performance is  presented below:

Amounts in thousands of U.S. Dollars
Pool gross revenues (included in Revenues) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Pool gross voyage expenses and commissions (included in Voyage

expenses and commissions) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GasLog’s adjustment for net pool allocation (included in Net pool
allocation) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

For the year ended

2018

2019

102,253

45,253

(10,154)

(8,086)

17,818

(4,264)

GasLog’s total net pool performance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

109,917

32,903

Voyage Expenses and Commissions: Voyage expenses and commissions increased by 16.7%, or
$3.4 million, from  $20.4 million during  the year  ended December  31, 2018  to  $23.8 million during the
year ended December 31, 2019. The  increase in voyage expenses and commissions is mainly attributable
to an increase of $3.4 million in bunkers and voyage expenses consumed during certain unchartered
and off-hire periods for the vessels trading in the  spot market.

Vessel Operating and Supervision Costs: Vessel operating and supervision costs increased by 9.1%,
or $11.6 million, from $128.1 million  during the year ended December 31,  2018 to $139.7 million during
the year ended December 31, 2019. The increase in  vessel operating and supervision  costs is primarily
attributable to the increase in ownership  days  due to the  deliveries of  the GasLog Gladstone and the
GasLog Warsaw on March 15, 2019 and July 31, 2019,  respectively and the full operation of the GasLog
Houston, the GasLog Hong Kong and the GasLog Genoa which were delivered on January 8, 2018,
March 20, 2018 and March 29, 2018,  respectively, the  increase in scheduled technical and maintenance
costs related to engine maintenance  and  costs related  to  dry-dockings, including expenses associated
with the preparation for compliance  with  the IMO 2020 regulations and the increase in insurance costs.
The above increases were partially offset by the  favorable  movement of the EUR/USD exchange rate.
Daily operating costs per vessel increased  from $14,306  per ownership day (as defined below) for  the
year ended December 31, 2018 to $14,595  per  ownership day (as defined below) for the year ended
December 31, 2019. Ownership days represent total calendar days for  our owned and bareboat fleet.

Depreciation: Depreciation increased by 9.7%, or $14.8 million, from  $153.2  million  during the

year ended December 31, 2018 to $168.0  million during  the year  ended December 31, 2019.  The
increase  in depreciation resulted mainly from  the delivery of the GasLog Gladstone on March 15, 2019
and the GasLog Warsaw on July 31, 2019, the full operation  in the year ending  December  31, 2019 of
the GasLog Houston, the GasLog Hong Kong and the GasLog Genoa following their delivery on
January 8, 2018, March 20, 2018 and March 29, 2018, respectively, and the  increase from the
depreciation of the right-of-use assets deriving from the  implementation of IFRS 16 Leases.

General and Administrative Expenses: General and administrative expenses  increased by 12.9%,  or
$5.4 million, from  $42.0 million during  the year  ended December  31, 2018  to  $47.4 million during the
year ended December 31, 2019. The  increase in general and administrative  expenses is mainly
attributable to restructuring costs of $4.7 million that occurred  in the fourth quarter of 2019.  Daily
general and administrative expenses  per  vessel  excluding the effect of the restructuring costs  decreased
from $4,507 per ownership day (as defined above) for the year ended December 31,  2018 to $4,297 per
ownership day (as defined above) for  the year ended  December 31,  2019.

85

Impairment Loss on Vessels:

Impairment loss on vessels was nil for the year ended December 31,
2018 and $162.1 million for the year  ended December 31, 2019.  The impairment loss was recognized
with respect to the Partnership’s Steam vessels (the  Methane Rita Andrea, the Methane Jane Elizabeth,
the Methane Alison Victoria, the Methane Shirley Elisabeth and the Methane Heather Sally) and the
Steam vessel owned by GasLog (the  Methane Lydon Volney), as a result of the impairment assessment
performed by the Group for the entire fleet  after concluding that  events and circumstances triggered
the existence of potential impairment of  its vessels as of December 31, 2019.

Financial Costs: Financial costs increased by 14.3%, or $23.9  million, from  $166.6 million during

the year ended December 31, 2018 to  $190.5  million during the year ended  December 31,  2019. The
increase in financial costs is attributable to an  increase of $15.8 million in interest expense on  loans,
bonds and cash flow hedges, an increase  of  $4.4 million in other financial costs  mainly due to the
unrealized foreign exchange losses on cash  and bond, an increase  of $2.1 million in  loss arising on bond
repurchases at premium and an increase of $1.6  million  deriving  mainly from the write-off of fees
relating to the old Partnership facility. During the  year ended December 31,  2019, we  had an  average
of $3,072.0 of outstanding indebtedness,  with a weighted average interest  rate of 5.1%, while during the
year ended December 31, 2018, we had  an  average of $2,886.3 million of  outstanding  indebtedness,
with a weighted average interest rate of 4.8%. These weighted  average  interest rates include interest
expense on loans and cash flow hedges and interest expense  on  bonds and  CCSs.

Loss on  Derivatives: Loss on derivatives increased by $49.3 million, from a loss  of $6.1 million for

the year ended December 31, 2018 to a loss of $55.4 million for the year  ended December 31,  2019.
The increase  is mainly attributable to an increase  of $46.1 million in  the loss  from mark-to-market
valuation of our derivative financial instruments carried at  fair value through profit  or loss,  which
reflected  a loss of  $7.9 million for the year ended  December  31, 2018, as compared to a loss of
$54.0 million for the year ended December 31, 2019,  a  decrease of $3.9 million in realized gain on
forward foreign exchange contracts held  for trading and an increase  of $0.7 million in  recycled loss of
cash flow hedges reclassified to profit  or  loss, partially offset by an increase  of  $1.3 million in realized
gain from interest rate swaps held for trading and a decrease of  $0.1 million  in the ineffective portion
of cash flow hedges.

Profit/(Loss) for the Year: Profit for the year decreased by $242.0 million, from a  profit  of
$126.4 million for the year ended December  31, 2018  to  a loss of $115.6 million for the year ended
December 31, 2019 as a result of the aforementioned factors.

Profit/(Loss) Attributable to Owners of the  Group: Profit Attributable to Owners of the  Group
decreased by  $148.4 million, from a profit of $47.7  million for the year  ended December  31, 2018 to  a
loss of $100.7 million for the year ended December 31, 2019.  The decrease in  profit to loss attributable
to the owners of GasLog resulted mainly from the respective  movements  in profit mentioned above.

Customers

For the year ended December 31, 2020,  we received 57.2% of our revenues  from Shell, 27.7% of
our  revenues  from major LNG producers,  15.0%  of  our revenues from various charterers in  the spot/
short-term market and 0.1% of our revenues from  Egypt LNG. For  the year ended December 31,  2019,
we received 70.0% of our revenues from Shell, 15.7% of our  revenues from  various charterers in the
spot/short-term market, 14.2% of our  revenues  from major LNG producers and 0.1% of  our revenues
from Egypt LNG.

Seasonality

While our owned and bareboat ships are mainly  employed  under multi-year, fixed-rate charter
arrangements, seasonal trends do impact  the revenues earned  during  the year  by  our  vessels  trading in

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the spot and short-term market and under variable rate charters. In recent years, there has  been a
significant increase in the seasonality of  LNG shipping spot rates  with relative strength during  the
months of September through January  and relative weakness during the  months of March  through
May.

Additionally, our business is not subject to seasonal borrowing requirements.

B. Liquidity and Capital Resources

As of December 31, 2020, GasLog has financed its capital  requirements with contributions  from its
pre-IPO shareholders, proceeds from  our IPO and the  GasLog Partners’ IPO,  proceeds from  the 2014,
2015, 2016, 2017 and 2018 follow-on  common and  preference equity offerings by GasLog and  GasLog
Partners,  the 2017, 2019 and 2020 follow-on debt offerings and  the  private  placements,  operating cash
flows and long-term financings including  bank loans and bond  offerings.  Our primary liquidity needs
are to fund our vessel operating costs  and general and  administrative expenses, to finance the purchase
and construction of our newbuildings  and  conversions, to purchase secondhand vessels, to service our
existing debt and to pay dividends. In  monitoring our working capital needs, we project our  charter hire
income and vessels’ maintenance and  running expenses, as well  as debt service obligations, and seek to
maintain adequate cash reserves in order to address revenue  shortfalls or budget  overruns, if any.

We  anticipate that our primary sources of  funds  will be available cash,  cash from  operations,
borrowings under existing and new loan agreements and additional equity. We believe that these
sources  of funds will be sufficient to meet  our liquidity  needs, although there can be no  assurance that
we will be able to obtain future debt  and  equity  financing on terms  acceptable  to  us.

Our funding and treasury activities are intended  to  meet  our  operating and financing requirements

while balancing investment returns in order  to  maintain appropriate liquidity. Cash and cash
equivalents are held primarily in U.S.  dollars.

As of December 31, 2020, we had $367.3  million  of  cash  and  cash equivalents, of which
$147.8 million was restricted cash, in  relation  to  the amount drawn for the delivery  of  the GasLog
Galveston until her delivery from the shipyard on January 4,  2021. In addition, an amount of
$23.5 million was held as cash collateral with respect to our derivative instruments and  is included in
Other non-current assets and Prepayments and  other current  assets. This amount has been  further
reduced to $12.9 million as of March 1,  2021.  The  funds in the ship  management client accounts were
held on behalf of customers of GasLog  LNG  Services in order  to  cover obligations of  third party
vessels under management.

As of December 31, 2020, we had an  aggregate of $3.8  billion of indebtedness outstanding under
our  credit facilities and bond agreements,  of which  $245.6 million was repayable within one year, and
$196.2 million of lease liabilities related to the sale and  leaseback of the Methane Julia Louise, of which
$9.6 million was payable within one year.

We  have entered into three CCSs to  exchange interest payments and principal on maturity on the
same terms as the NOK 2024 Bonds  and  designated  the CCSs as hedges of the variability  of  the USD
functional currency equivalent cash flows on the NOK 2024 Bonds. Refer to Note 26 to our audited
consolidated financial statements included elsewhere in  this  annual report for details on our derivative
arrangements.

GasLog has hedged 47.6% of its expected floating  interest rate exposure  on its outstanding debt

(excluding the lease liability) as of December 31,  2020.

The total contract price for our two newbuildings  on order  as of December  31, 2020 is

approximately $378.0 million, (excluding  the GasLog Galveston which was delivered on January 4, 2021)
of which $56.6 million was paid as of December 31, 2020. The balance is  payable under each

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shipbuilding contract in installments  upon the  attainment of certain  specified milestones, with the
largest portion of the purchase price  for each ship  coming due upon its delivery. We are  scheduled to
take delivery of the remaining newbuildings on various dates in 2021. As  of December 31,  2020, the
total remaining balance of the contract prices  for the  two  newbuildings  was  $321.1 million (excluding
the GasLog Galveston which was delivered on January 4, 2021), all of which is due within 12 months
which  will be funded under the existing  7xNB Facility signed December 12, 2019, available cash and
cash from operations.

On May 16, 2017, GasLog Partners commenced its ATM Programme under which the Partnership

may, from time to time, raise equity  through the  issuance  and sale of new  common units having an
aggregate offering price of up to $100.0  million in accordance with the  terms of an equity distribution
agreement (the ‘‘Equity Distribution Agreement’’) entered  into  on the same date. Citigroup Global
Markets Inc., Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner &  Smith Incorporated, Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC
and Morgan Stanley & Co. LLC agreed to act  as  sales agents. On November  3, 2017, the  Partnership
entered into the Amended and Restated  Equity Distribution Agreement  to  increase the size of the
ATM Programme to $144.0 million and  to include UBS Securities LLC as a sales agent. On
February 26, 2019, the Partnership entered into a  Third  Amended and Restated Equity Distribution
Agreement to further increase the size of  the ATM Programme from $144.0 million to $250.0  million.

No issuances of common units were  made under  the ATM Programme in 2020. From
establishment of the ATM Programme  through December 31, 2020, GasLog Partners issued and
received payment for 5,291,304 common  units  at a  weighted average price of $23.33 per common  unit
for total gross proceeds of $123.4 million and total net  proceeds of  $121.2 million. In  connection with
the issuance of common units under  the ATM Programme during this period, the Partnership also
issued 107,987 general partner units to its  general partner in  order for  GasLog  to  retain its 2.0%
general partner interest. The net proceeds from  the issuance of the  general partner units were
$2.5 million.

On January 29, 2019, the board of directors of GasLog Partners authorized a  unit repurchase
programme of up to $25.0 million covering  the period from January 31, 2019  to  December 31, 2021.
Under the terms of the repurchase programme,  GasLog Partners may repurchase common units from
time to time, at its discretion, on the  open market or in privately negotiated transactions. In the  year
ended December 31, 2019, GasLog Partners repurchased and cancelled 1,171,572  of the Partnership’s
common units at a weighted average  price of $19.52 per common unit for a total amount of
$22.9 million, including commissions.  On  February 5, 2020, the board of directors of GasLog Partners
authorized a renewal of the unit repurchase programme  taking  the total authority outstanding  under
the programme to $25.0 million, to be  utilized from February 10, 2020 to December 31, 2021. Since the
authorization of the unit repurchase  programme and  through December 31, 2020, GasLog Partners has
repurchased and cancelled a total of  1,363,062  of the Partnership’s common units  at a weighted average
price of $17.50 per common unit for  a  total amount of $23.9 million, including commissions.

On February 20, 2019, the Partnership entered into a credit agreement with Credit  Suisse AG,

Nordea Bank Abp, filial i Norge (‘‘Nordea’’) and Iyo Bank, Ltd., Singapore Branch, each  an original
lender  and Nordea acting as security agent  and  trustee for  and on behalf of the  other finance parties
mentioned above, of up to $450.0 million (the ‘‘2019 Partnership Facility’’), in order to refinance the
existing indebtedness due in November  2019 on  five  of  its  vessels.  Subsequently,  on the same date, the
Development Bank of Japan, Inc., entered  the facility  as lender  via a transfer certificate. The
agreement provides for an amortizing  revolving credit facility which can be repaid and redrawn at any
time for a period of five years. The total available facility  amount will be reduced on a quarterly basis,
with a final balloon amount payable concurrently with the last  quarterly installment, if any,  in February
2024. The vessels covered by the 2019  Partnership  Facility  are the  GasLog Shanghai, the GasLog
Santiago, the GasLog Sydney, the Methane Rita Andrea and the Methane Jane Elizabeth. Interest on the
2019 Partnership Facility is payable at a rate of LIBOR plus a margin.

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On March 6, 2019, the Partnership drew down $360.0 million under the 2019  Partnership  Facility,

out of which $354.4 million was used  to  refinance  the outstanding debt of GAS-three  Ltd.,
GAS-four Ltd., GAS-five Ltd., GAS-sixteen Ltd. and GAS-seventeen Ltd., which would have  been due
in November 2019. On April 1, 2019,  the Partnership  drew down an  additional $75.0  million under the
2019 Partnership Facility.

On May 16, 2019, GasLog closed a follow-on issue of $75.0 million aggregate  principal amount of

the 8.875% Senior Notes priced at 102.5% of par with a  yield to maturity of  7.89%. The gross  proceeds
from this offering were $76.9 million, including  a $1.9 million premium,  while the net  proceeds, after
deducting the underwriting discount and offering expenses, were $75.4  million.

On June 25, 2019, GasLog Hellas-1 Special Maritime Enterprise entered into a  loan agreement
with ABN AMRO BANK N.V. and Oversea-Chinese  Banking Corporation Limited, for the financing of
the GasLog Warsaw, which was delivered on July 31, 2019 (the ‘‘GasLog Warsaw Facility’’). The
agreement provides for a single tranche  of $129.5 million that was drawn on July 25, 2019  and is
repayable in 28 equal quarterly installments of $1.6  million each and a final balloon payment of
$84.2 million payable concurrently with  the last quarterly installment in June 2026. The  loan bears
interest at LIBOR plus a margin.

On November 21, 2019, GasLog completed the issuance of NOK 900.0 million (equivalent to
$98.6 million) of NOK 2024 Bonds in the  Norwegian bond market. The  NOK 2024  Bonds mature  in
November 2024 and have a coupon of  6.25% over  the three-month Norwegian Interbank Offered Rate
(‘‘NIBOR’’). The proceeds from the  issuance were used in part to repurchase and  cancel NOK
316.0 million (or $34.6 million) of the outstanding senior unsecured bonds due May 2021 (the ‘‘NOK
2021 Bonds’’) at a price of 104.75% of par  value. The outstanding balance of the NOK 2021 Bonds,
after the partial repurchase, amounted  to  NOK 434.0 million (equivalent to $49.2  million). On
January 31, 2020, GasLog completed the  repurchase of the outstanding balance of  the NOK 2021
Bonds at a price of 104.0% of par value plus accrued interest,  for  a  total consideration of NOK
451.4 million ($54.4 million). In addition,  GasLog paid $10.5 million for the partial  exchange of  the
outstanding 8.875% Senior Notes at a price of  104.75% of par value. The exchange  was completed  in
January 13, 2020. On January 31, 2020, GasLog repurchased and cancelled NOK 434,000 of the NOK
2021 Bonds at a price of 104.0% of par  value, resulting  in a  loss of  $1.9 million.

On December 12, 2019, GAS-twenty  eight Ltd.,  GAS-thirty Ltd., GAS-thirty one  Ltd.,  GAS-thirty

two Ltd., GAS-thirty three Ltd., GAS-thirty four Ltd. and GAS-thirty five Ltd. entered into a  loan
agreement with 13 international banks, with Citibank  N.A. London  Branch and  DNB Bank ASA,
London Branch acting as agents on behalf of  the other finance parties.  The financing is backed by the
Export Import Bank of Korea (‘‘KEXIM’’) and the Korea Trade Insurance Corporation (‘‘K-Sure’’),
who are either directly lending or providing cover  for  over 60% of the facility. The agreement  of  up to
$1,052.8 million partially finances the delivery  of seven newbuilds scheduled to be delivered in  2020 and
2021. The loan bears interest plus a margin. On March 26, 2020, on May 7, 2020, on July 9, 2020, on
November 12, 2020 and on December  29, 2020, GasLog drew  $152.5 million,  $149.4 million,
$149.3 million, $147.8 million and $147.8  million,  respectively under this facility to partially finance  the
delivery of the GasLog Windsor, the GasLog Wales, the GasLog Westminster, the GasLog Georgetown
and the GasLog Galveston.

In December 2019, GasLog achieved improvements to the financial and  non-financial covenants

across the entirety of its bank debt, most  notably decreasing minimum liquidity requirements from
3.0% of total indebtedness, or 4% if  dividends are paid,  to a flat amount of  $75.0 million which will be
applicable upon repayment of our U.S. dollar  bonds maturing in March 2022, which  have a minimum
liquidity requirement of 2.5% of total indebtedness.  The covenants  are  now aligned with the terms  of
the 7xNB Facility and the  GasLog Warsaw facility concluded earlier in 2019.

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On February 13, 2020, on March 13, 2020  and  on March  18, 2020, GasLog drew  down

$23.3 million, $50.7 million and $26.0  million, respectively,  under the  revolving credit facility of up  to
$1.1 billion entered into on July 19, 2016 (the ‘‘Legacy  Facility Refinancing’’) and was subsequently
refinanced as discussed below.

On June 29, 2020, GasLog completed the sale of 14,400,000 common  shares at a price  of  $2.50 per

share for total gross proceeds of $36.0  million through a Private Placement. The net  proceeds were
used for general corporate purposes.  This transaction increased  liquidity and  further strengthened the
capital structure of GasLog. Approximately 75%  of shares issued  in the Private  Placement were
purchased by GasLog’s directors and affiliates, including 6,500,000 common shares purchased by
Blenheim Holdings Ltd., wholly-owned  by  the Livanos  family and  4,000,000 common  shares purchased
by a wholly-owned affiliate of the Onassis Foundation.

On July 16, 2020, GasLog Partners entered  into  a credit agreement of $260.3  million with BNP
Paribas, Credit Suisse AG and Alpha Bank  S.A.,  each an original lender, with BNP  Paribas acting as
security agent and trustee for and on behalf of  the other finance parties mentioned above, in order to
refinance the existing indebtedness due  in  2021  on three of its vessels. The facility  will  amortize  over
ten equal semi-annual instalments of $8.6  million beginning in January  2021, with a final  balloon
amount of $174.4 million payable concurrently with the last  installment  in July  2025. Interest on the
facility will be payable at a rate of LIBOR plus a  margin. An  amount  of $260.3 million was drawn on
July 21, 2020, out of which $258.5 million was used to refinance the outstanding indebtedness of
GAS-twenty Ltd., GAS-seven Ltd. and GAS-eight Ltd.,  the respective entities owning the  Methane
Shirley Elisabeth, the GasLog Seattle and the Solaris. The existing loan facilities of the specified  vessels
were terminated.

In addition, on July 16, 2020, GasLog  Partners  entered into a credit agreement of $193.7 million
with DNB Bank ASA, London Branch,  and ING  Bank N.V., London Branch, each an original lender,
with DNB Bank ASA, London Branch  acting as  security agent and trustee for and  on behalf of  the
other finance party mentioned above,  in order to refinance the existing indebtedness due in 2021 on
three of its vessels. The facility will amortize over  ten equal semi-annual instalments of $8.6  million
beginning in January 2021, with a final  balloon  amount  of  $107.7 million  payable concurrently with the
last installment in July 2025. Interest on the facility will be payable at a rate of LIBOR plus a margin.
An amount of $193.7 million was drawn  down on  July 21, 2020, out of which $174.9 million was used
to refinance the outstanding indebtedness of  GAS-nineteen Ltd.,  GAS-twenty one Ltd.  and GAS-twenty
seven Ltd., the respective entities owning  the Methane Alison Victoria, the Methane Heather Sally and
the Methane Becki Anne. The existing loan facilities of the specified  vessels  were terminated.

Furthermore, on July 16, 2020 GAS-one  Ltd.,  GAS-two Ltd.,  GAS-six  Ltd.,  GAS-nine Ltd.,
GAS-ten Ltd., and GAS-eighteen Ltd.  entered into a credit agreement of $576.9 million with  ABN
AMRO Bank N.V., Citigroup Global Markets Limited and Nordea, acting as global co-coordinators and
bookrunners, and HSBC Bank plc acting  as mandated lead arranger; Credit Agricole Corporate and
Investment Bank acting as lead arranger  and Unicredit  Bank AG and  National  Bank of  Australia
Limited acting as arrangers, each of those  being  an original lender. The credit agreement was entered
to refinance the existing indebtedness due in  2021 of six of the Group’s vessels. ABN AMRO
Bank N.V. was appointed by the other finance parties  in this syndicate as security  agent and  trustee.
The facility comprises of a $494.5 million Term Loan Facility which will amortize over 18 equal
quarterly installments of $9.3 million beginning in April 2021  (following an  initial repayment in January
2021 in the amount of $18.7 million), with a final balloon  amount of  $307.5 million  payable
concurrently with the last installment  in June 2025  and  a $82.4  million  revolving loan  facility which also
matures in June 2025. Interest on the facility will be payable at a rate of LIBOR plus a margin. An
amount of $576.9 million was drawn on  July 21, 2020, out of which $557.0 million was used to
refinance the outstanding indebtedness  of GAS-one  Ltd., GAS-two  Ltd.,  GAS-six Ltd., GAS-nine Ltd.,
GAS-ten Ltd., and GAS-eighteen Ltd.,  the respective entities  owning the  GasLog Savannah, the

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GasLog Singapore, the GasLog Skagen, the GasLog Saratoga, the GasLog Salem and the Methane Lydon
Volney. The balance of the proceeds will be  used  for general  corporate and working capital  purposes.
The existing loan facilities of the specified vessels were terminated.

On July 30, 2020, GasLog entered into a credit agreement of $96.8 million with National  Bank of
Greece S.A. (‘‘NBG’’) for the refinancing of  GAS-fifteen  Ltd., the  entity  owning the  GasLog Chelsea.
NBG is acting as the sole original lender. An amount of $96.8  million  was drawn on  July 31, 2020, out
of which $92.2 million was used to refinance the outstanding indebtedness of the  GasLog Chelsea. The
balance of the proceeds will be used  for  general corporate and working capital purposes. The facility
amortizes over 20 equal quarterly installments  of $1.9 million  beginning  in October  2020, with  a final
balloon amount of $59.0 million payable concurrently  with the last instalment in July  2025. The existing
loan facility of the specified vessel was terminated.

Diversifying the list of hedging providers, GasLog has entered into novation agreements with
Nordea and Standard Chartered Bank. Subsequently,  two interest  rate  swaps originally  held with
Nordea and due to mature in 2022, have now  been transferred to Standard Chartered Bank. The
aggregate notional amount of the trades is $166.6 million. Furthermore, as part  of the closing of the
Partnership’s  refinancing in July 2020,  GasLog Partners entered into four  new interest rate swap
agreements with an aggregate notional amount of $133.3 million  due in 2024 and 2025  with the facility
lenders DNB Bank ASA, London Branch  and ING Bank N.V.,  London  Branch, all secured under the
GasLog Partners’ $193.7 million facility agreement signed  on July 16, 2020 in  relation  to
GAS-nineteen Ltd., GAS-twenty Ltd. and GAS-twenty seven Ltd., the vessel owning entities of the
Methane Alison Victoria, the Methane Heather Sally and the Methane Becki Anne. At the same time, two
DNB swaps with GasLog for the same  notional amount and tenor were  terminated. Finally,  as part of
the closing of the GasLog Chelsea’s refinancing in July 2020, GAS-fifteen  Ltd.,  entered into a  new
interest rate swap agreement with a notional  amount of  $96.8  million  due in 2025 with the facility
lender  NBG and secured by the NBG’s $96.8  million facility agreement signed on July  30, 2020. Due to
the actions undertaken above, combined  with favorable movements in marked-to-market  valuations and
after interest payments made under the  swap rollovers, cash  collateral with respect  to  our interest rate
and cross-currency swap agreements  decreased to $12.9 million as of March 1, 2021.

On October 21, 2020, GasLog’s subsidiary, GAS-twenty five Ltd.,  completed the sale and leaseback

of the GasLog Hong Kong with Sea 190 Leasing. The vessel was  sold  to  Sea  190 Leasing. GasLog has
leased back the vessel under a bareboat charter from Sea  190 Leasing  for a period of  up to twelve
years. GasLog has the option to re-purchase the  vessel on  pre-agreed terms no  earlier than  the end of
year one and no later than the end of  year 12 of the bareboat charter. The vessel remains on its
charter with Total.

On January 22, 2021, GasLog’s subsidiary, GAS-twenty four  Ltd., completed the sale and leaseback

of the GasLog Houston with Hai Kuo Shipping. The vessel was  sold  to  Hai Kuo Shipping. GasLog has
leased back the vessel under a bareboat charter from Hai  Kuo Shipping  for a  period of  up to eight
years. GasLog has the obligation to re-purchase the vessel at the end of the charter period.  GasLog has
also the option to re-purchase the vessel on  pre-agreed terms no earlier than the first interest period
and no later than the end of year 8 of the  bareboat charter. The  vessel remains  on its charter with
Shell.

As our fleet expands, we will evaluate changes to the quarterly  dividend consistent  with our cash

flow and liquidity position. Our policy  is to pay dividends  in  amounts that  will  allow  us  to  retain
sufficient liquidity to fund our obligations  as well as to execute our business plan  going forward.  Our
board of directors will determine the timing and amount of all  dividend payments, based  on various
factors, including our earnings, financial condition, cash requirements and availability, restrictions in
our  credit facilities and the provisions  of Bermuda law. Accordingly, we cannot  guarantee that we will
be able to pay quarterly dividends. See  ‘‘Item 3.  Key Information—D. Risk Factors’’ and ‘‘Item 8.
Financial Information—A. Consolidated  Financial Statements and Other Financial Information—
Common Shares Dividend Policy’’ for  a discussion  of risks  related to our  ability to pay dividends.

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Working Capital Position

As of December 31, 2020, our current assets totaled $437.5 million, while current liabilities totaled

$459.4 million, resulting in a negative working capital  position of $21.9  million.  Current liabilities
include $59.6 million of unearned revenue in relation to hires received in advance of  December 31,
2020 (which represents a non-cash liability that  will  be  recognized as  revenue  in January 2021  as the
services are rendered).

Management monitors the Company’s liquidity position throughout  the year  to  ensure that it has

access to sufficient funds to meet its  forecast cash requirements, including newbuilding and debt service
commitments, and to monitor compliance with the financial  covenants  within its loan  and bond
facilities. Taking into account the volatile  commercial and financial  market conditions  experienced
throughout 2020, we anticipate that our primary sources  of funds for  at  least twelve months from the
date  of  this report  will be available cash, cash from operations and existing borrowings,  including the
credit agreements entered into on July 16, 2020 and July 30, 2020,  which refinanced in full the debt
maturities due in 2021, as well as the  sale and  leaseback transactions we concluded  in October  2020
and January 2021 that released incremental liquidity of $61.2 million.  We believe that these  anticipated
sources  of funds will be sufficient to meet  our liquidity  needs and to comply  with our banking
covenants for at least twelve months  from the date  of  this report and therefore it is appropriate to
prepare the financial statements on a  going concern basis.  Additionally, we  may enter into new debt
facilities in the future, as well as equity or debt instruments, although there can be no assurance that
we will be able to obtain additional debt or  equity financing on terms  acceptable to us, which will  also
depend  on financial, commercial and  other factors, as well  as a  significant recovery in  capital market
conditions and sustainable improvement  of the  LNG market, that are beyond our control. Our
long-term ability to repay our debts and  maintain compliance with our  debt covenants  for at least
twelve months from the date of this report without  reliance on  additional sources of finance is also
dependent on a sustainable longer-term recovery in the LNG charter  market from the market
disruption observed in 2020 as a result of the COVID-19 outbreak. Finally, our 8.875% Senior Notes
will mature on March 22, 2022, which we plan to refinance in due course.

Cash Flows

Year ended December 31, 2019 compared to the  year  ended  December 31, 2020

The following table summarizes our net cash  flows from operating,  investing and financing

activities for the years indicated:

Amounts in thousands of U.S. dollars
Net cash provided by operating activities . . . . . .
Net cash used in investing activities . . . . . . . . . .
Net  cash provided by financing activities . . . . . .

$ 317,423
(442,978)
50,066

$ 288,951
(729,569)
545,954

$ (28,472)
(286,591)
495,888

Year ended December 31,

2019

2020

Change

Net Cash Provided By Operating Activities

Net cash provided by operating activities decreased by $28.4  million,  from $317.4 million during
the year ended December 31, 2019 to  $289.0  million during the year ended  December 31,  2020. The
decrease is mainly  attributable to a decrease of $27.9  million from movements  of the working  capital
accounts (the $21.0 million decrease  in movements of cash collateral relating to swaps partially offset
by a decrease of $32.3 million in movements of balances with  related  parties, mainly due to the
collection of balances due from the LNG carrier pooling arrangement operated by GasLog, and Golar
LNG Ltd. (the ‘‘Cool Pool’’), a decrease  of $6.6 million from  movements in trade and other receivables

92

and a decrease of $4.4 million from movements in trade payables), a decrease of $24.0  million  in
realized gains on interest rate swaps  held  for trading and  an increase of  $8.6 million in vessel operating
and supervision costs, which were partially offset by  a decrease of $16.3 million  in cash paid for
interest, an increase of $5.5 million in  revenues, a decrease  of  $4.3 million in realized losses  from
forwards, a decrease of $4.3 million in net pool allocation  and a net increase of  $1.7 million from the
remaining movements.

Net Cash Used In Investing Activities

Net cash used in investing activities increased  by $286.6 million, from $443.0  million during  the

year ended December 31, 2019 to $729.6  million  during  the year  ended December 31, 2020.  The
increase is mainly attributable to an increase of $260.9 million in net  cash used  in payments  for the
construction costs  of newbuildings and other fixed assets,  a net decrease of  $16.0 million in cash from
short-term investments in the year ended  December 31,  2020, compared to  the same period of 2019, an
increase of $4.9 million in net cash used  in payments for right-of-use assets and a decrease  of
$4.6 million in cash from interest income.

Net Cash Provided By Financing Activities

Net cash provided by financing activities increased by $495.9 million, from  $50.1 million during the

year ended December 31, 2019 to $546.0  million  during  the year  ended December 31, 2020.  The
increase is mainly attributable to an increase of $1.2 billion  in proceeds  from loans  and bonds,  a
decrease of $103.4 million in dividend payments, a  decrease of $44.8 million in  payments for NOK
bond repurchases at a premium, an increase  of  $36.0 million in proceeds from the Private Placement,
an increase of $31.6 million in proceeds from entering  into  interest  rate swaps and a decrease  of
$23.7 million in cash used for purchases  of treasury shares, partially offset by an increase  of
$934.0 million in loan and bond repayments,  an increase of $32.0 million  relating to the  payment for
the termination of interest rate and cross  currency swaps, a net increase  of  $9.1 million in payments of
loan issuance costs and an increase of $1.2  million  in payments for  lease liabilities.

Year ended December 31, 2018 compared to the  year  ended  December 31, 2019

The following table summarizes our net cash  flows from operating,  investing and financing

activities for the years indicated:

Amounts in thousands of U.S. dollars
Net cash provided by operating activities . . . . . .
Net cash used in investing activities . . . . . . . . . .
Net  cash provided by financing activities . . . . . .

$ 283,710
(692,999)
368,120

$ 317,423
(442,978)
50,066

$ 33,713
250,021
(318,054)

Year ended December 31,

2018

2019

Change

Net Cash Provided By Operating Activities

Net cash provided by operating activities increased by $33.7 million,  from $283.7 million during the

year ended December 31, 2018 to $317.4  million during the year  ended December 31, 2019.  The
increase was attributable to an increase  of  $57.7 million caused  by movements in working capital
accounts due primarily to (a) increased cash  from related  parties  of $56.3 million (mainly  collection of
Cool Pool receivables), (b) an increase  of  $20.3 million from movements in  other payables  and accruals,
and (c) an increase of $4.6 million from  movements in trade and other receivables,  partially  offset by
an increase in cash collateral on swaps of  $22.2 million, an  increase of $28.2  million  in total revenues
(revenues and net pool allocation), partially  offset by a  decrease  of $29.9  million in cash paid for
interest including the interest paid for  finance leases and a net decrease of  $22.3 million from the
remaining movements.

93

Net Cash Used In Investing Activities

Net cash used in investing activities decreased by  $250.0 million, from $693.0  million during  the

year ended December 31, 2018 to $443.0  million  during  the year  ended December 31, 2019.  The
decrease is attributable to a decrease of  $203.7 million  in net cash used in payments for the
construction costs  of newbuildings and other fixed assets,  a net increase of  $45.5 million in cash from
short-term investments in the year ended  December 31,  2019, compared to  the same period of 2018
and an increase of $0.8 million in cash from interest income.

Net Cash Provided By Financing Activities

Net cash provided by financing activities decreased by $318.0 million, from  $368.1 million during

the year ended December 31, 2018 to  $50.1 million during the year ended  December 31,  2019. The
decrease is mainly  attributable to an increase  of  $316.0 million in bank loan repayments, a decrease of
$208.4 million in proceeds from the GasLog Partners’ issuance of preference units, a decrease of
$60.4 million in proceeds from the GasLog Partners’ common unit  offerings,  an increase of
$46.7 million in payments for NOK bond  repurchase at a premium, an increase of $26.6  million  in cash
used for purchases of treasury shares or common  units of GasLog  Partners,  an increase of $18.5  million
in payments of loan issuance costs, an increase  of $15.4 million in  dividend payments on common and
preference shares, an increase of $3.7  million  in payments for  cross currency swaps’ termination, an
increase of $2.6 million in payments  for lease  liabilities, an increase of $0.8 million in payments for
equity-related costs and a decrease of  $0.5 million in  proceeds from stock  option exercise,  partially
offset by an increase of $381.6 million in proceeds from  borrowings.

Borrowing Activities

Credit Facilities

The following summarizes certain terms of the  nine  outstanding facilities  as of  December 31,  2020:

Facility Name

Lender(s)

Subsidiary Party
(Collateral Ship)

Outstanding
Principal Amount

Available
Undrawn
Amount

$873.8  million

Nil

October 2015
Facility

GAS-eleven  Ltd.
Citibank, N.A.,
London Branch,
(GasLog Greece),
Nordea  Bank  AB, GAS-twelve Ltd.
London  Branch,
(GasLog Glasgow),
The Export-Import GAS-thirteen Ltd.
(GasLog Geneva),
Bank  of Korea,
GAS-fourteen Ltd.
Bank  of America,
(GasLog Gibraltar),
National
GAS-twenty two  Ltd.
Association, BNP
(GasLog Genoa),
Paribas, Sea Bridge
GAS-twenty three  Ltd.
Finance Limited,
(GasLog Gladstone)
Credit  Suisse AG,
and  GAS-twenty
HSBC Bank  plc,
four Ltd.  (GasLog
ING  Bank  N.V.,
London  Branch,
Houston)
KEB HANA  Bank,
London  Branch,
KfW
IPEX-Bank GmbH,
National  Australia
Bank  Limited,
Oversea-Chinese
Banking
Corporation
Limited, Soci´et´e
G´en´erale and The
Korea
Development  Bank

Interest Rate Maturity

LIBOR +
applicable
margin

2028,
2030
and
2031(1)

Payment of
Principals
Installments
Schedule

GAS-eleven  Ltd.:
10  consecutive
semi-annual
installments of
$5.8 million, a
balloon  payment
due  in 2026  of
$36.3  million and
thereafter 4
consecutive
semi-annual
installments of
$4.2  million  until
March 2028.

GAS-twelve Ltd.:
10 consecutive
semi-annual
installments of
$5.8 million, a
balloon payment
due in 2026 of
$36.3 million and
thereafter 4
consecutive
semi-annual
installments of
$4.2 million until
June  2028.

94

Facility Name

Lender(s)

Subsidiary  Party
(Collateral  Ship)

Outstanding
Principal Amount

Available
Undrawn
Amount

Interest Rate Maturity

Payment of
Principals
Installments
Schedule

GAS-thirteen Ltd.:
11 consecutive
semi-annual
installments of
$5.7 million, a
balloon payment
due in 2026 of
$35.8 million and
thereafter 4
consecutive
semi-annual
installments of
$4.2 million until
September 2028.

GAS-fourteen Ltd.:
11 consecutive
semi-annual
installments of
$5.7 million, a
balloon payment
due in 2026 of
$35.8 million and
thereafter 4
consecutive
semi-annual
installments of
$4.2 million until
October 2028.

GAS-twenty
two Ltd.: 14
consecutive
semi-annual
installments of
$5.9 million, a
balloon payment
due in 2028 of
$37.0 million and
thereafter 4
consecutive
semi-annual
installments of
$4.3 million until
March 2030.

GAS-twenty
three  Ltd.: 16
consecutive
semi-annual
installments of
$5.9 million, a
balloon payment
due in 2029 of
$37.0 million and
thereafter 4
consecutive
semi-annual
installments of
$4.3 million until
March 2031.

95

Facility Name

Lender(s)

Subsidiary  Party
(Collateral  Ship)

Outstanding
Principal Amount

Available
Undrawn
Amount

Interest Rate Maturity

2019 GasLog

Credit  Suisse AG, GAS-three  Ltd.

$398.5  million

Nil

LIBOR  +
applicable
margin

2024

Partners Facility Nordea, Iyo

Bank Ltd.,
Singapore Branch
and Development
Bank  of Japan, Inc.

GasLog Warsaw

Facility

ABN  AMRO
BANK N.V. and
Oversea-Chinese
Banking
Corporation
Limited

(GasLog  Shanghai),
GAS-four  Ltd.
(GasLog  Santiago),
GAS-five  Ltd.
(GasLog Sydney),
GAS-sixteen Ltd.
(Methane  Rita Andrea)
and
GAS-seventeen Ltd.
(Methane  Jane
Elizabeth)

GasLog  Hellas-1
Special  Maritime
Enterprise  (GasLog
Warsaw)

$121.4 million

N/A

LIBOR +
applicable
margin

2026

$305.9 million

LIBOR  +
applicable
margin

2032
and
2033(1)

GAS-twenty  eight  Ltd. $738.4 million
(‘‘GasLog  Windsor’’),
GAS-thirty  Ltd.
(‘‘GasLog
Westminster’’),
GAS-thirty  one Ltd.
(‘‘GasLog Wales’’),
GAS-thirty  two  Ltd.
(‘‘GasLog
Geargetown’’),
GAS-thirty three  Ltd.
(‘‘GasLog Galveston’’),
GAS-thirty four  Ltd.
and GAS-thirty
five  Ltd.

7xNB Facility

Citibank,  N.A.,
London Branch,
DNB (UK)  Ltd.,
Skandinaviska
Enskilda  Banken
AB  (publ), The
Export-Import
Bank  of Korea,
Bank  of America,
National
Association, BNP
Paribas, Seoul
Branch,
Commonwealth
Bank of Australia,
KfW
IPEX-Bank GmbH,
National  Australia
Bank  Limited,
Oversea-Chinese
Banking
Corporation
Limited, Soci´et´e
G´en´erale, Standard
Chartered Bank,
The Korea
Development  Bank
and  KB  Kookmin
Bank

96

Payment of
Principals
Installments
Schedule

GAS-twenty
four Ltd.: 14
consecutive
semi-annual
installments of
$5.9 million, a
balloon payment
due in 2028 of
$37.0 million and
thereafter 4
consecutive
semi-annual
installments of
$4.3 million until
January 2030.

13  consecutive
quarterly
reductions  of
$7.4 million and a
balloon amount of
$302.9 million,
together with  the
final  quarterly
reduction.

23  consecutive
quarterly
repayments of
$1.6 million and a
balloon amount of
$84.2 million
together with the
final  quarterly
reduction.

GAS-twenty
eight Ltd.: 12
consecutive
semi-annual
installments of
$4.3  million,  a
balloon  payment
due in  2027 of
$54.2 million and
thereafter 10
consecutive
semi-annual
installments of
$4.3  million  until
March 2032.

GAS-thirty Ltd.:
13 consecutive
semi-annual
installments of
$4.2 million, a
balloon payment
due in 2027 of
$53.1 million and
thereafter 10
consecutive
semi-annual
installments of
$4.2 million until
July 2032.

Payment of
Principals
Installments
Schedule

GAS-thirty
one  Ltd.: 12
consecutive
semi-annual
installments of
$4.2 million, a
balloon payment
due in 2027 of
$53.1 million and
thereafter 10
consecutive
semi-annual
installments of
$4.2 million until
May 2032.

GAS-thirty
two Ltd.: 13
consecutive
semi-annual
installments of
$4.1 million, a
balloon payment
due in 2027 of
$52.6 million and
thereafter 10
consecutive
semi-annual
installments of
$4.1 million until
November 2032.

GAS-thirty
three  Ltd.: 13
consecutive
semi-annual
installments of
$4.1 million, a
balloon payment
due in 2027 of
$52.6 million and
thereafter 10
consecutive
semi-annual
installments of
$4.1 million until
December 2032.

10  equal
semi-annual
instalments of
$8.6 million
beginning  in
January 2021, with
a final balloon
amount of
$174.4 million
payable
concurrently with
the last
installment in  July
2025.

Facility Name

Lender(s)

Subsidiary  Party
(Collateral  Ship)

Outstanding
Principal Amount

Available
Undrawn
Amount

Interest Rate Maturity

GasLog Partners

BNP Paribas,

$260.3M Facility Credit Suisse  AG,
Alpha  Bank S.A.
and  Development
Bank  of Japan, Inc GAS-twenty Ltd.
(Methane  Shirley
Elisabeth)

GAS-seven Ltd.
(GasLog  Seattle),
GAS-eight  Ltd,
(Solaris),

$260.3  million

N/A

LIBOR +
applicable
margin

2025

97

Facility Name

Lender(s)

GasLog Partners

DNB Bank  ASA

$193.7M Facility and ING

Bank  N.V.

Subsidiary  Party
(Collateral  Ship)

Outstanding
Principal Amount

Available
Undrawn
Amount

$193.7 million

N/A

GAS-nineteen  Ltd.
(Methane  Alison
Victoria), GAS-twenty
one Ltd.  (Methane
Heather  Sally),
GAS-twenty
seven Ltd.  (Methane
Becki  Anne)

Interest Rate Maturity

LIBOR  +
applicable
margin

2025

GasLog $576.9M ABN AMRO

Facility

GAS-one  Ltd  (GasLog $576.9 million
Savannah),
GAS-two  Ltd.
(GasLog Singapore),
GAS-six Ltd. (GasLog
Skagen),

Bank N.V.,
Citigroup Global
Markets Limited,
Nordea,  HSBC
Bank  plc, Credit
Agricole Corporate GAS-nine Ltd.
and  Investment
Bank and
Unicredit Bank AG Salem),

(GasLog Saratoga),
GAS-ten Ltd. (GasLog

N/A

LIBOR  +
applicable
margin

2025

GAS-eighteen Ltd.
(Methane  Lydon
Volney)

GasLog Chelsea

National Bank  of

$96.8M Facility Greece S.A.

GAS-fifteen  Ltd.
(GasLog  Chelsea)

$94.9 million

N/A

LIBOR  +
applicable
margin

2025

CMB Financial
Leasing  Co.  Ltd.
(‘‘CMBFL’’)

GAS-twenty  five  Ltd.
(GasLog  Hong Kong)

$163.4  million

N/A

LIBOR +
applicable
margin

2032

GasLog Hong

Kong Sale and
leaseback
transaction
(‘‘GasLog Hong
Kong SLB’’)

Payment of
Principals
Installments
Schedule

10 equal
semi-annual
instalments of
$8.6 million
beginning in
January 2021,  with
a final balloon
amount of
$107.7 million
payable
concurrently with
the last
installment in  July
2025.

Term  Loan Facility
of  $494.5 million
will  amortize over
18 equal quarterly
instalments of
$9.3 million
beginning in April
2021  (following an
initial repayment
in January  2021 in
the amount of
$18.7 million),
with  a final
balloon amount of
$307.5 million
payable
concurrently  with
the last installment
in June 2025.
Revolving loan
facility of
$82.4 million also
matures  in June
2025.

19  equal  quarterly
instalments  of
$1.9 million
beginning in
October 2020,
with  a final
balloon amount of
$59.0 million
payable
concurrently with
the last instalment
in July 2025.

20 equal quarterly
instalments of
$2.7 million
beginning in
January 2021, 28
equal  quarterly
instalments of
$1.4 million
beginning in
January 2026, with
a final balloon
amount
$70.0 million
concurrently with
the last instalment
in October  2032.

(1)

Maturity dates are scheduled  12 years  from  the  drawdown date  of  each individual  vessel loan  based on  the vessel’s actual  or scheduled
delivery date.

98

Our credit facilities are secured as follows:

(cid:127) first priority mortgages over the ships owned  by  the respective borrowers;

(cid:127) guarantees from us and our subsidiary  GasLog Carriers Ltd.  in the case of  the GasLog Warsaw

Facility, the 7xNB Facility, the GasLog $576.9M Facility and the GasLog  Chelsea $96.8M
Facility;  in the case of the 2019 GasLog  Partners  Facility,  the GasLog Partners $260.3M Facility
and the GasLog Partners $193.7M Facility guarantees from  GasLog Partners and GasLog
Partners  Holdings LLC; in the case of the  October 2015  Facility,  guarantees from us and
GasLog Carriers Ltd. for an amount up  to  the value  of the commitments of the vessels owned
by GasLog Carriers Ltd. and guarantees from  the Partnership and GasLog  Partners
Holdings LLC for an amount up to the  value  of  the commitments of the vessels owned  by
GasLog Partners Holdings LLC;

(cid:127) for certain of our facilities, a pledge or a negative pledge of the share capital  of the respective

borrower; and

(cid:127) for certain of our facilities, a first assignment of all earnings and insurances related to the ship

owned by the respective borrower.

Our business is not subject to seasonal borrowing requirements.

Covenants and Events of Default

General

Our credit facilities impose certain operating and financial restrictions  on  us.  These restrictions

generally limit our subsidiaries’ ability  to,  among  other things:

(cid:127) incur additional indebtedness, create  liens or  provide guarantees;

(cid:127) provide any form of credit or financial  assistance to, or  enter into any  non-arms’ length

transactions with, us or any of our affiliates;

(cid:127) sell or  otherwise dispose of assets,  including our  ships;

(cid:127) engage in merger transactions;

(cid:127) terminate any charter;

(cid:127) amend our shipbuilding contracts;

(cid:127) change the manager of our ships;

(cid:127) undergo a change in ownership; or

(cid:127) acquire assets, make investments or enter  into  any joint venture arrangements  outside of  the

ordinary course of business.

Our credit facilities (with the exception  of the 2019  GasLog Partners Facility; GasLog Partners

$260.3M Facility; the GasLog Partners $193.7M Facility;  and for  the  debt  of  the vessels owned by
GasLog Partners under the October 2015 Facility) also impose  specified financial covenants that apply
to us and our subsidiaries on a consolidated basis. These financial covenants include the  following:

(cid:127) our net working capital (excluding  the current  portion of long-term  debt) must be not less than

$0;

(cid:127) our total indebtedness divided by our total assets must not exceed 75.0%;

(cid:127) the aggregate amount of cash and cash  equivalents  and short-term investments must be at least

$75.0 million;

99

(cid:127) the ratio of EBITDA over our debt service obligations (including  interest  and debt repayments)
on a trailing twelve months’ basis must be not less than 110.0%. The ratio shall be regarded as
having been complied with even if the ratio falls below the stipulated 110.0% when cash and
cash equivalent and short-term investments are at least $110.0 million; and

(cid:127) our market value adjusted net worth must  at all times be not less than $350.0 million.

In the case where the Partnership is a guarantor to our Credit Facilities, such facilities also impose

specified financial covenants that apply  to  the Partnership and its  subsidiaries on a consolidated basis.
These financial covenants include the following:

(cid:127) the aggregate amount of cash and cash  equivalents,  short-term investments and available
undrawn facilities with remaining maturities  of  at least  six months (excluding  loans from
affiliates) must be at least $45.0 million;

(cid:127) total indebtedness divided by total  assets  must be less than 65.0%; and

(cid:127) the Partnership is permitted to declare or pay any dividends or distributions,  subject to no  event
of default having occurred or occurring as a consequence  of  the payment  of such dividends or
distributions.

Our credit facilities also impose certain restrictions relating  to  us and our other  subsidiaries,
including restrictions that limit our ability  to  make any substantial change in  the nature of our business
or to engage in transactions that would  constitute a change  of control, as defined in  the relevant  credit
facility, without repaying all of our indebtedness in full, or to allow  our largest shareholders  to  reduce
their shareholding in us below specified thresholds.

Certain of our credit facilities also contain vessel  employment conditions,  pursuant  to  which we
could be required in the event of a charter termination or in  certain other circumstances to deposit
cash in an account held with the applicable lender until we have obtained a  new time charter  on terms
acceptable to such lender, or under certain  of  our  credit facilities repay  the outstanding  loan amount.

Our credit facilities contain customary events  of  default, including non-payment of principal or
interest, breach of covenants or material inaccuracy of representations,  default under other material
indebtedness  and bankruptcy. In addition,  our credit facilities contain covenants requiring us and
certain of our subsidiaries to maintain the aggregate  of  (i) the  market  value,  on a charter exclusive
basis, of the mortgaged vessel or vessels  and (ii) the market value of any additional security provided  to
the lenders, at a total value not less than  120.0% of  the then outstanding  amount  under the applicable
facility (in the case of each individual vessel in the  October 2015  Facility and  7xNB Facility,  115.0% for
the first two years after each drawdown  and 120.0% at any time thereafter  and in the case of the
GasLog Partners $193.7M facility, 130.0%).  If we fail  to  comply with these covenants  and are  not  able
to obtain covenant waivers or modifications, our  lenders could require us to make prepayments  or
provide additional collateral sufficient to bring us into compliance with  such covenants, and if we  fail to
do so our lenders could accelerate our  indebtedness.

Compliance with the financial covenants  is required on  a semi-annual  basis and we were in

compliance with the respective financial covenants as  of  December 31,  2020.

October 2015 Facility

On October 16, 2015, GAS-eleven Ltd., GAS-twelve Ltd., GAS-thirteen Ltd., GAS-fourteen Ltd.,

GAS-twenty two Ltd., GAS-twenty three  Ltd.,  GAS-twenty four Ltd. and  GAS-twenty five Ltd. entered
into a debt financing agreement with 14 international  banks for $1.3 billion  to  partially  finance the
delivery of the eight newbuildings expected to be delivered in  2016, 2018 and 2019. The  financing  is
backed by the Export Import Bank of  Korea (‘‘KEXIM’’) and the Korea  Trade Insurance Corporation
(‘‘K-Sure’’), who are either directly lending or providing cover for over 60% of the facility.

100

The loan agreement provides for four tranches of $412.5 million, $201.1 million, $206.1  million  and

$491.7 million. The facility is also sub-divided into eight  loans, one loan per newbuilding  vessel,  to  be
provided for each of the vessels on a  pro  rata basis under each  of the four tranches.  Each drawing
under the first three tranches shall be  repaid in 24  consecutive  semi-annual equal instalments
commencing six months after the actual delivery of the  relevant  vessel according to a 12-year profile.
Each  drawing under the fourth tranche  shall be repaid in  20 consecutive semi-annual  equal instalments
commencing six months after the actual delivery of the  relevant  vessel according to a 20-year profile,
with a balloon payment together with the  final installment. On March 22,  2016 and June  24, 2016,
$163.0 million was drawn down on each date  with respect  to the deliveries of the GasLog Greece and
the GasLog Glasgow, on September 26, 2016 and October 25, 2016, $160.7 million was  drawn  down  on
each date with respect to the deliveries of the GasLog Geneva and the GasLog Gibraltar, on January 2,
2018 and March 14, 2018, $166.2 million  was drawn on each  date with respect to the deliveries of the
GasLog Houston and the GasLog Hong Kong, while on March 23, 2018 and March  11, 2019,
$165.8 million was drawn down on each date  with  respect to the deliveries of the GasLog Genoa and
the GasLog Gladstone. Amounts drawn bear interest at LIBOR plus a  margin.

On October 21, 2020, the outstanding indebtedness  of GAS-twenty  five  Ltd., in the  amount  of

$136.8 million was prepaid pursuant  to the sale and leaseback agreement entered  into  with CMBFL.

The obligations under the aforementioned facility are secured  by a first priority mortgage over
each  vessel, a pledge of the share capital  of  the respective vessel  owning companies and a first priority
assignment of earnings related to each  vessel, including charter revenue,  management revenue  and any
insurance and requisition compensation. Obligations under  the facility  are guaranteed  by  the
Partnership and its subsidiary GasLog  Partners  Holdings LLC, guaranteeing  up to the value of the
commitments relating to the GasLog Greece, the GasLog Glasgow, the GasLog Geneva and the GasLog
Gibraltar, and by GasLog and GasLog Carriers Ltd. for up to the value of the outstanding
commitments on the remaining vessels under  the facility.

2019 GasLog Partners Facility

On February 20, 2019, GAS-three Ltd.,  GAS-four Ltd., GAS-five Ltd., GAS-sixteen Ltd.,

GAS-seventeen Ltd., GasLog Partners and GasLog Partners  Holdings  LLC  entered into a loan
agreement with Credit Suisse AG, Nordea and Iyo Bank, Ltd. Singapore  Branch,  each an original
lender  and Nordea acting as security agent  and  trustee for and on behalf of the  other  finance parties
mentioned above, for a credit facility for  up to $450.0 million  (the  ‘‘2019 GasLog Partners Facility’’)  for
the purpose of refinancing in full the  existing Partnership Facility. Subsequently, on  the same date, the
Development Bank of Japan, Inc. entered  the facility as lender  via transfer  certificate. The  vessels
covered by the 2019 GasLog Partners  Facility are  the  GasLog Shanghai, the GasLog Santiago, the
GasLog Sydney, the Methane Rita Andrea and the Methane Jane Elizabeth.

The agreement provides for an amortizing revolving credit  facility which  can be repaid  and

redrawn at any time, subject to the outstanding amount immediately after any drawdown  not  exceeding
(i) 75%  of the aggregate of the market values of  all vessels under the agreement, or  (ii) the  total
facility amount. The total facility amount reduces in 20 equal  quarterly amounts of $7.4  million,  with a
final balloon amount of $302.9 million reducing concurrently with  the last quarterly reduction in
February 2024. The credit facility bears interest at LIBOR plus a margin. On March 6, 2019, the
Partnership drew down $360.0 million under the 2019 GasLog Partners Facility and an additional
$75.0 million on April 1, 2019.

The obligations under the 2019 GasLog Partners Facility are secured by a  first  priority mortgage

over the vessels, a pledge of the share capital of the respective vessel  owning companies and  a first
priority assignment of earnings related  to  the vessels, including charter revenue, management revenue

101

and any insurance and requisition compensation. The  obligations  under  the facility  are guaranteed by
the Partnership and GasLog Partners  Holdings LLC.

The 2019 GasLog Partners Facility is  subject to the Partnership’s financial covenants and  to  our

customary restrictions and events of  default.

GasLog Warsaw Facility

On June 25, 2019, GasLog Hellas-1 Special Maritime Enterprise entered into a  loan agreement
with ABN AMRO BANK N.V. and Oversea-Chinese  Banking Corporation Limited, for the financing of
the GasLog Warsaw, which was delivered on July 31, 2019 (the ‘‘GasLog Warsaw Facility’’). The
agreement provides for a single tranche  of $129.5 million that was drawn on July 25, 2019  and is
repayable in 28 equal quarterly installments of $1.6  million each and a final balloon payment of
$84.2 million payable concurrently with  the last quarterly installment in June 2026. The  loan bears
interest at LIBOR plus a margin.

The obligations under the GasLog Warsaw Facility are secured by a first priority mortgage  over the

vessel, a pledge of the share capital of  the respective vessel-owning company and a first priority
assignment of earnings related to the  vessel. The obligations under the facility are guaranteed by
GasLog and GasLog Carriers Ltd.

The GasLog Warsaw Facility is subject to our financial covenants and to our customary  restrictions

and events of default.

7xNB Facility

On December 12, 2019, GAS-twenty  eight Ltd.,  GAS-thirty Ltd., GAS-thirty one Ltd.,  GAS-thirty

two Ltd., GAS-thirty three Ltd., GAS-thirty four Ltd. and GAS-thirty five Ltd. entered into a  loan
agreement with 13 international banks, with Citibank N.A. London  Branch and  DNB Bank ASA,
London Branch acting as agents on behalf of the other  finance parties.  The financing is backed by the
Export Import Bank of Korea (‘‘KEXIM’’)  and  the Korea Trade Insurance Corporation (‘‘K-Sure’’),
who are either directly lending or providing cover for  over 60% of the facility. The agreement of  up to
$1,052.8 million partially finances the delivery of seven newbuilds scheduled to be delivered in  2020 and
2021. The loan agreement provides for four tranches of $176.5 million $174.8 million,  $356.7 million,
and $344.8 million. The facility is also  sub-divided into  seven loans, one loan per newbuilding vessel, to
be provided for each of the vessels on  a  pro rata  basis under each of the four tranches.  Each drawing
under the first and the third tranche is repaid in 24 consecutive semi-annual equal installments
commencing six months after the actual delivery  of the  relevant vessel according to a 12-year profile.
Each drawing under the second tranche is repaid in 14 consecutive semi-annual equal instalments
commencing six months after the actual delivery of the relevant vessel according to an average 7-year
profile. Each drawing under the fourth tranche is repaid in a single bullet seven years after the actual
delivery of the relevant vessel.

The obligations under the 7xNB Facility are secured by a first priority mortgage over the vessel, a

pledge of the share capital of the respective vessel-owning  company and a first priority assignment of
earnings related to the vessel. The obligations under the facility are guaranteed by GasLog and GasLog
Carriers Ltd.

The 7xNB Facility is subject to our financial covenants and to our customary restrictions and

events of default.

2020 GasLog Partners $260.3M Facility and 2020 GasLog  Partners  LP $193.7M  Facility

On July 16, 2020, GasLog Partners entered into a credit agreement of $260.3 million with BNP
Paribas, Credit Suisse AG and Alpha Bank S.A.,  each an original lender, with BNP Paribas acting as

102

security agent and trustee for and on behalf of  the other finance parties mentioned above. The purpose
of the facility was the refinancing of  the outstanding indebtedness of GAS-twenty Ltd., GAS-seven Ltd.
and GAS-eight Ltd. including the payment  of loan fees under this facility.  The vessels covered  by  the
2020 GasLog Partners $260.3M Facility  are the  Methane Shirley Elisabeth, the GasLog Seattle and the
Solaris.

The relevant amount of $260.3 million  was  drawn  on July 21, 2020, out of which $258.5 was used

to refinance the outstanding indebtedness of GAS-twenty Ltd., GAS-seven Ltd. and GAS-eight Ltd.
The facility will amortize over ten equal  semi-annual  instalments  of  $8.5 million beginning in January
2021, with a final balloon amount of $174.3 million  payable  concurrently with the last  installment  in
July 2025. The credit facility bears interest at LIBOR plus a margin.

On October 15, 2020, the Development Bank of  Japan Inc. (‘‘DBJ’’) acceded as a new lender in
the facility via transfer certificate. BNP Paribas  and Credit  Suisse each  transferred $25.0 million  of their
commitment to DBJ following the consent  of  the  Borrowers. Alpha Bank S.A. retained  the
participation amount it was allocated as an original lender.

On July 16, 2020, GasLog Partners entered  into  a credit agreement of $193.7  million with DNB

Bank  ASA, London Branch, and ING Bank  N.V.,  London  Branch, each  an original lender, with  DNB
Bank  ASA, London Branch acting as security agent and trustee for  and on behalf of the other  finance
party mentioned above. The purpose of the facility was the refinancing of the outstanding indebtedness
of GAS-nineteen Ltd., GAS-twenty one  Ltd. and GAS-twenty seven Ltd. and for general  corporate
purposes. The vessels covered by the 2020  GasLog  Partners LP $193.7M  Facility are  Methane Alison
Victoria, the Methane Heather Sally and the Methane Becki Anne.

The relevant amount of $193.7 million was drawn  down on July 21, 2020,  out of which

$174.9 million was used to refinance  the  outstanding  indebtedness of GAS-nineteen Ltd., GAS-twenty
one Ltd. and GAS-twenty seven Ltd.  The  facility will  amortize over ten equal  semi-annual instalments
of $8.5 million beginning in January 2021,  with a final balloon  amount  of  $107.7 million payable
concurrently with the last installment  in July 2025. Interest on the facility will be payable at a  rate of
LIBOR plus a margin.

The obligations under the 2020 GasLog Partners $260.3M Facility and the  2020 GasLog

Partners  LP $193.7M Facility, are secured  by a first priority mortgage over the vessels, a  pledge of the
share capital of the respective vessel owning companies and a first  priority  assignment  of  earnings
related to the vessels, including charter  revenue, management  revenue and any insurance and
requisition compensation. The obligations under the facility are guaranteed by the Partnership and
GasLog Partners Holdings LLC.

The 2020 GasLog Partners $260.3M  Facility and the 2020  GasLog Partners LP $193.7M  Facility
are subject to GasLog Partners’ financial  covenants and customary  restrictions and events  of  default.

2020 GasLog $576.9M Facility

Also, on July 16, GasLog refinanced  the existing indebtedness  due in 2021 for the  GasLog

Savannah, the GasLog Singapore, the GasLog Skagen, the GasLog Saratoga, the GasLog Salem, and the
Methane Lydon Volney by entering into a credit agreement of  $576.9 million. ABN AMRO Bank N.V.,
Citigroup Global Markets Limited and  Nordea  acted  as global  coordinators  and bookrunners,  while
HSBC Bank plc acted as mandated lead arrangers;  Credit Agricole Corporate and Investment  Bank
acted  as lead arranger and Unicredit  Bank AG and National Bank  of Australia Limited acted as
arrangers, each of those being an original  lender. ABN AMRO  Bank N.V. was appointed by the other
finance parties in this syndicate as security agent and trustee. The facility comprises  of a $494.5 million
Term Loan Facility and a $82.4 million  revolving  loan facility. An amount of $576.9  million was  drawn
on July 21, 2020, out of which $557.0 million was used to refinance  the outstanding indebtedness of

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GAS-one Ltd., GAS-two Ltd., GAS-six  Ltd., GAS-nine  Ltd.,  GAS-ten Ltd., and  GAS-eighteen Ltd., the
respective entities owning the GasLog Savannah, the GasLog Singapore, the GasLog Skagen, the
GasLog Saratoga, the GasLog Salem and the Methane Lydon Volney.

The obligations under the 2020 GasLog $576.9M Facility are secured  by a first priority mortgage

over the vessel, a pledge of the share  capital of the  respective vessel-owning  company and a first
priority assignment of earnings related  to  the vessel. The  obligations  under the  facility  are guaranteed
by GasLog and GasLog Carriers Ltd.

The 2020 GasLog $576.9M Facility is  subject to our  financial covenants and to our customary

restrictions and events of default.

GasLog Chelsea $96.8M Facility

On July 30, 2020, GasLog entered into a credit agreement with NBG (acting as the sole original

lender) for the refinancing of GAS-fifteen  Ltd., the entity owning  the  GasLog Chelsea. The facility
comprises of $96.8 million which was  drawn on July 31, 2020,  out of which $92.2 million was used to
refinance the outstanding indebtedness  of the GasLog Chelsea.

The obligations under the GasLog Chelsea $96.8M  Facility  are secured by  a first priority mortgage

over the vessel, a pledge of the share  capital  of  the respective vessel-owning  company and a first
priority assignment of earnings related  to  the vessel. The obligations  under the  facility are guaranteed
by GasLog and GasLog Carriers Ltd.

The GasLog Chelsea $96.8M Facility  is  subject to our financial covenants and to our customary

restrictions and events of default.

GasLog Hong Kong SLB Transaction

On October 21, 2020, GasLog entered  into a sale and leaseback transaction with  a subsidiary of

CMB Financial Leasing for the refinancing of GAS-twenty five Ltd., the entity owning the  GasLog
Hong Kong. The transaction comprises of $163.4 million which was raised on October 21, 2020, out of
which  $136.8  million was used to refinance  the outstanding indebtedness of the GasLog Hong Kong.
GAS-twenty five Ltd., has chartered back the vessel on a bareboat basis for twelve years and has
re-purchase options on pre-agreed terms  no earlier than the end of year one and no later than  the end
of year twelve of the bareboat charter. The vessel remains on its charter with Total.

The obligations under the bareboat charter are guaranteed by GasLog and GasLog Carriers Ltd.

and the bareboat charter is subject to our financial covenants and to our customary restrictions and
events of default.

Bonds

On November 27, 2019, GasLog completed  the issuance of NOK 900 million (equivalent to
$98.6 million) of NOK 2024 Bonds in the  Norwegian bond market. The  NOK 2024  Bonds will  mature
in November 2024 and bear interest at NIBOR plus margin. Interest payments shall be made  in arrears
on a quarterly basis. We may redeem  the aforementioned bond  in whole or in part  as from May 2024
at 101% of par plus accrued interests on  the redeemed amount.

Under the terms of the NOK 2024 Bonds we are required to  comply with  the financial covenants

listed below:

(cid:127) net working capital (excluding the  current portion of long-term  debt) must not be less than $0;

(cid:127) total indebtedness divided by total  assets  must not exceed 75.0%;

104

(cid:127) the aggregate amount of cash and cash  equivalents  and short-term investments must be at least

$75.0 million;

(cid:127) the ratio of EBITDA over our debt service obligations (including  interest  and debt repayments)
on a trailing twelve months’ basis must be not less than 110.0%. The ratio shall be regarded as
having been complied with even if the  ratio falls below the stipulated 110.0% when cash and
cash equivalents and short-term investments  are at least $110.0 million; and

(cid:127) the Group’s market value adjusted net worth  must  at all times be not less than  $350.0 million.

In addition, the terms of the NOK 2024 Bonds include a dividend restriction according to which

we may not make Distributions that in  aggregate  exceed during any calendar year $1.10/share.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, GasLog may make any  amount of Distributions, so long  as the Group’s
cash and cash equivalents and short-term  investments exceed $150.0  million, provided that GasLog can
demonstrate, by delivering a compliance certificate  to  the bond trustee, that  no event of  default is
continuing or would result from such  Distributions.

On March 22, 2017, GasLog closed a  public offering of $250.0  million aggregate principal amount

of the 8.875% Senior Notes at a public  offering price  of  100% of the  principal  amount.  The net
proceeds from the offering after deducting the  underwriting discount  and  offering expenses were
$245.3 million.

On May 16, 2019, GasLog closed a follow-on issue of $75.0 million aggregate  principal amount of

the 8.875% Senior Notes priced at 102.5% of par with a  yield to maturity of  7.89%. The gross  proceeds
from this offering were $76.9 million, including  a $1.9 million premium,  while the net  proceeds, after
deducting the underwriting discount and offering expenses, were $75.4  million.

Interest payment shall be made in arrears on a quarterly basis. GasLog may  redeem the 8.875%
Senior Notes, in whole or in part, at any time  and from  time  to  time at a redemption price  equal to
the greater of (a) 100% of the principal amount of such notes plus  accrued  and unpaid interest to the
date  of  redemption and (b) determined by the  quotation  agent, the sum  of the present values of the
remaining scheduled payments of principal and interest  thereon (not including any  portion of such
payments of interest accrued and unpaid as  of the date of redemption) discounted to the  redemption
date  on a quarterly basis at the adjusted treasury  rate, plus 50 basis  points, plus accrued and unpaid
interest thereon to the date of redemption.

GasLog as issuer of the 8.875% Senior Notes is required to comply with financial covenants which

include the following:

(cid:127) net working capital (excluding the  current portion of long-term  debt) must be not less than $0;

(cid:127) total indebtedness divided by total  indebtedness  plus total equity  must not exceed 75.0%;

(cid:127) the ratio of EBITDA over debt service, on  a trailing four quarter basis,  shall  be  not  less  than

100.0%;

(cid:127) the aggregate amount of all unencumbered cash and cash equivalents  must be not less than the

higher of 2.50% of total indebtedness  or $35.0 million;

(cid:127) the issuer’s market value adjusted  net worth  must at all times be not less than  $300.0 million.

Compliance with covenants under the NOK 2024 Bonds and the  8.875%  Senior Notes is required

at all times and we were in compliance with the respective  financial  covenants as  of December  31,
2020.

105

Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures  About  Market Risk

For information about our exposure to market risks,  see ‘‘Item 11.  Quantitative  and Qualitative

Disclosures About Market Risk’’.

Capital Expenditures

We  make capital expenditures from time to time in connection  with the expansion, operation and

maintenance of our owned fleet. In 2010  we took delivery of  two LNG  carriers, in 2013  we took
delivery of six LNG carriers and acquired a secondhand vessel, in 2014  we took delivery  of  two LNG
carriers and acquired six secondhand  vessels,  in 2015 we acquired  two  secondhand vessels and took
delivery of one LNG carrier, in 2016 we  took delivery of four LNG carriers, in  2018 we  took  delivery
of three LNG carriers, in 2019 we took delivery of two LNG carriers and in 2020 we took  delivery of
four  LNG carriers. During the years  ended December 31, 2020,  2019, 2018,  2017 and  2016, we  funded
$0.7 billion, $0.5 billion, $0.7 billion,  $0.1  billion and $0.8 billion, respectively,  of  acquisition,
construction and delivery costs, including installment payments  on newbuildings, with funds  borrowed
under credit facilities and the bonds, capital  contributions  from  our pre-IPO  shareholders, proceeds
from our IPO and the GasLog Partners’  IPO, proceeds  from follow-on equity offerings and private
placements and proceeds from the sale of  vessels  to  GasLog Partners.

As of December 31, 2020, our commitments for  capital expenditures related primarily to two
contracted LNG carriers on order were  approximately $321.1 million  (excluding  the GasLog Galveston
which  was delivered on January 4, 2021).  Amounts are  payable under each shipbuilding contract in
installments upon the attainment of certain specified  milestones in  each ship’s construction,  with the
largest portion of the purchase price  for each ship  coming due upon its delivery.

We  intend to fund these commitments  from borrowings under the 7xNB  Facility  which has  an

undrawn amount of $305.9 million, available cash and cash from operations.

To the extent that we are unable to draw down the  amounts committed under our  credit facilities,
we will need to find alternative financing. If we are unable  to  find alternative financing, we will not be
capable of funding all of our commitments for capital expenditures relating to our contracted
newbuildings and secondhand vessels,  which could adversely impact  our ability  to  pay dividends to our
shareholders and materially adversely affect our results of operations and  financial condition.

Critical Accounting Policies

The preparation of financial statements  in conformity with  IFRS requires us  to  make estimates and
assumptions that affect the reported amounts  of assets and liabilities, revenues and expenses  recognized
in the consolidated financial statements. GasLog’s management evaluates whether estimates should be
made on an ongoing basis, utilizing historical  experience, consultation with experts and other methods
management considers reasonable in  the particular circumstances.  However, uncertainty about  these
assumptions and estimates could result  in  outcomes that could require a material adjustment  to  the
carrying  amount of the assets or liabilities  in the future. Critical accounting policies are those that
reflect significant judgments of uncertainties  and potentially  result in  materially different results under
different assumptions and conditions. For a description of our  critical  accounting judgments and  key
sources  of estimation uncertainty in applying our accounting policies, see Note 2  to  our consolidated
financial statements included elsewhere in  this annual report.

Classification of the Non-Controlling Interests

The non-controlling interests in the Partnership comprise the portion of the Partnership’s common

units that are not directly or indirectly held  by GasLog (32,726,222 units as of December 31,  2020).
Under the terms of the Partnership Agreement, the Partnership is  required to distribute 100.0% of

106

available cash (as defined in the Partnership Agreement)  with respect  to each  quarter  within 45 days of
the end of the quarter to the partners.  Available  cash can be summarized as  cash and cash equivalents
less  an amount equal to cash reserves established by the Partnership’s board  of directors  to  (i) provide
for the proper conduct of the business of  the Partnership  (including reserves for  future capital
expenditures and for anticipated future credit needs of the  Partnership) subsequent to such  quarter,
(ii) comply with applicable law or any loan agreement,  security agreement, mortgage, debt instrument
or other  agreement or obligation to which  any  Partnership group member  is a party  or by which it is
bound or its assets are subject and/or  (iii)  provide  funds  for certain  distributions relating to future
periods.

In reaching a judgment as to whether the non-controlling  interests in the Partnership  should be

classified as liabilities or equity interests, management has considered the  wide discretion of the
Partnership’s  board of directors to determine whether any portion of the amount of cash  available  to
the Partnership constitutes available cash  and that  it is  possible  that there could be no  available cash.
In the event that there is no available cash,  as determined  by the  Partnership’s board of directors, the
Partnership does not have a contractual  obligation to make  a distribution.  Accordingly, management
has concluded that the non-controlling interests  do not represent a contractual obligation  on the
Partnership to deliver cash and therefore  should  be  classified as equity  within the financial statements.

Impairment of Vessels

We  evaluate the carrying amounts of  our  vessels  to  determine  whether  there is any  indication that

our  vessels have suffered an impairment loss by considering both internal and external sources of
information. If any such indication exists,  the recoverable amount of vessels  is estimated in  order to
determine the extent of the impairment loss, if any.

Recoverable amount is the higher of fair value less costs to sell and  value  in use.  Our estimates of

recoverable value assume that the vessels  are  all in seaworthy condition  without need for repair  and
certified in class without notations of any kind. In  assessing  the fair value less cost to sell  of  the vessel,
we obtain charter free market values  for each vessel  from independent  and  internationally recognized
ship brokers on a semi-annual basis,  which  are also  commonly used and accepted by our lenders  for
determining compliance with the relevant covenants in our credit facilities. Vessel  values  can be highly
volatile, so the charter-free market values  may not be indicative  of the current or future  market  value
of our vessels or prices that could be  achieved if we were to sell them. In assessing value in  use, the
estimated future cash flows are discounted to their present value using a  discount rate  that  reflects
current market assessments of the time  value of money and  the risks specific  to  the asset for which  the
estimates of future cash flows have not been adjusted.  The  projection of cash flows related to vessels is
complex and requires management to  make various estimates including  future charter rates, vessel
operating expenses and the discount  rate.

The table below sets forth in U.S. dollars (i) the historical acquisition cost  of  our  vessels  and
(ii) the carrying value of each of our  vessels  as of December 31, 2019  and  December 31,  2020, after
giving effect to the aggregate impairment  charge of $162.1 million recorded against our  six Steam
vessels for the year ended December  31, 2019  and $28.6 million recorded  against our five Steam vessels
for the year ended December 31, 2020.

107

Owned Fleet and Bareboat Vessels

Vessel

Acquisition Date

. . . . . . . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . . . . . . March  2013

. . . . . . .
. . . . . .
. . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . . April  2014
. . . . . . . . . April  2014
. . . . . . . . April 2014
June 2014
June 2014
June 2014
June 2014

GasLog Savannah(3)(8) . . . . . . . . . . . . . May 2010
GasLog Singapore(3)(8) . . . . . . . . . . . . .
July 2010
GasLog Shanghai(3)(4) . . . . . . . . . . . . .
January 2013
GasLog Santiago(3)(4)
GasLog Sydney(3)(8) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May 2013
GasLog Skagen(3)(8)
July 2013
GasLog Chelsea(4)(5) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . October 2013
GasLog Seattle(3)(8) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . December 2013
Methane Rita Andrea(2)(6)(8)
Methane Jane Elizabeth(6)(8)
Methane Lydon Volney(2)(6)(8)
Methane Alison Victoria(2)(7)(8)
Methane Shirley Elisabeth(2)(7)(8)
Methane Heather Sally(2)(7)(8)
Solaris(3)(8)
GasLog Saratoga(3)(8)
Methane Julia Louise(5)(8) . . . . . . . . . . . March  2015
Methane Becki Anne(5)(8) . . . . . . . . . . . March  2015
GasLog Salem(3)(8)
GasLog Greece(3)(8) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . March  2016
GasLog Glasgow(3)(8)
GasLog Geneva(3)(8)
GasLog Gibraltar(3)(8)
GasLog Houston(3)(8)
GasLog Genoa(3)(8) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . March  2018
GasLog Hong Kong(3)(8) . . . . . . . . . . . . March 2018
GasLog Gladstone(3)(8)
. . . . . . . . . . . . March 2019
GasLog Warsaw(3)(4)
GasLog Windsor(3)(4) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . April  2020
GasLog Wales(3)(4)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . May 2020
GasLog Westminster(3)(4)
July 2020
GasLog Georgetown(3)(4)
Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . September 2016
. . . . . . . . . . . . . October  2016
January 2018
. . . . . . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . November  2020

. . . . . . . . . . . . . December 2014

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . April 2015

. . . . . . . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . . . . . .

June 2016

July 2019

Carrying values(1)
(in thousands of U.S. dollars)

Cargo capacity Acquisition December  31,
cost

(cbm)

2019

155,000
155,000
155,000
155,000
155,000
155,000
153,600
155,000
145,000
145,000
145,000
145,000
145,000
145,000
155,000
155,000
170,000
170,000
155,000
174,000
174,000
174,000
174,000
174,000
174,000
174,000
174,000
180,000
180,000
180,000
180,000
174,000

$ 229,795
227,252
189,233
189,111
195,429
195,338
162,338
201,198
156,613
156,613
156,613
156,610
156,599
156,599
201,849
204,146
232,334
232,334
204,573
208,971
208,471
203,867
203,738
207,784
219,436
214,946
217,609
189,261
191,096
186,216
185,813
184,815
$6,226,600

$ 171,964
169,898
154,681
164,925
172,548
173,241
134,927
170,132
99,030
102,078
109,098
96,604
103,432
105,916
172,078
177,256
200,032
199,521
177,750
186,430
187,411
184,500
184,897
196,241
208,845
204,138
212,737
186,878
—
—
—
—
$4,607,188

December  31,
2020

$ 169,017
164,906
149,413
159,202
166,656
167,358
133,568
164,085
90,533
97,362
99,285
96,385
90,283
103,274
166,699
173,987
197,668
197,834
175,543
180,688
181,689
178,615
179,011
190,253
202,508
197,948
206,484
181,536
186,884
182,359
183,644
184,165
$5,198,842

(1)

(2)

(3)

(4)

(5)

(6)

(7)

(8)

Our  vessels and the vessel held under finance lease are stated at carrying values (see Note 6 to our consolidated financial
statements  for our vessels and Note 7 to our consolidated financial  statements for the vessel held under finance lease
included elsewhere in this annual report). An aggregate  impairment loss of $162.1 million was recorded for the year ended
December 31, 2019 and $28.6 million was recorded for  the year  ended December 31, 2020.

Indicates vessels for which we recorded an impairment loss of $28.6 million in the aggregate for the year ended
December 31, 2020.

The construction of these vessels was completed on the acquisition date.

The market value of each vessel individually exceeds the carrying value of that vessel as of December 31, 2020.

The vessels were built in 2010.

The vessels were built in 2006.

The vessels were built in 2007.

Indicates vessels for which, as of December 31, 2020, the basic charter-free market value is lower than the vessel’s carrying
value.  After the impairment recognition of $28.6 million, the aggregate  carrying value of these vessels exceeds their
aggregate basic charter-free market value by $411.9  million as of December 31, 2020. The values in use for each of the
GasLog Savannah, the GasLog Singapore, the GasLog Sydney, the GasLog Skagen, the GasLog Seattle, the Solaris, the
GasLog Saratoga, the Methane Jane Elizabeth, the Methane Julia Louise, the Methane Becki Anne, the GasLog Salem, the
GasLog Greece, the GasLog Glasgow, the GasLog Geneva, the GasLog Gibraltar, the GasLog Genoa, the GasLog Houston,
the GasLog Hong Kong and the GasLog Gladstone were higher than the respective carrying amount of  these vessels and,
consequently, no impairment loss was recognized.

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As of June 30, 2020 and December 31, 2020, the  carrying amounts of each  of  the six  Steam  vessels

(the Methane Rita Andrea, the Methane Jane Elizabeth, the Methane Lydon Volney, the Methane Alison
Victoria, the Methane Shirley Elisabeth and  the Methane Heather Sally), twelve TFDE vessels (the
GasLog Savannah, the GasLog Singapore, the GasLog Sydney, the GasLog Skagen, the GasLog Seattle,
the Solaris, the GasLog Saratoga, the GasLog Salem, the GasLog Greece, the GasLog Glasgow, the
Methane Julia Louise and the Methane Becki Anne) and four X-DF vessels (the  GasLog Genoa, the
GasLog Gladstone, the GasLog Houston and the GasLog Hong Kong) were higher than the charter free
market values estimated by ship brokers  on both dates,  while two additional TFDE vessels, the GasLog
Geneva and the GasLog Gibraltar had carrying amounts higher than their estimated charter-free market
values as of December 31, 2020 only.  We  concluded  that this, together with  certain other events and
circumstances such as the downward  pressure on economic  activity and energy  demand, as well  as the
significant uncertainty regarding future LNG demand  and, therefore, LNG  shipping requirements
pursuant to the COVID-19 pandemic,  combined with our  reduced expectations  for the  estimated  rates
at which employment for our vessels could be secured  over the  near-term in the  spot market, indicated
the existence of potential impairment of  these vessels. As a result, we performed an  impairment
assessment for these vessels by comparing their values in use, being the  discounted projected net
operating cash flows for these vessels  to  their carrying values as of June  30, 2020 and December 31,
2020. The assumptions that we used  in  our  discounted projected  net  operating cash flow  analysis
included, among others, utilization, operating revenues, voyage  expenses and commissions,  dry-docking
costs, operating expenses (including vessel  management costs), residual values and  the discount  rate.
The key assumptions, being those to which the  outcome of  the impairment assessment  is most sensitive,
are the estimate of charter rates for non-contracted revenue days  and the discount rate.

Revenue assumptions were based on  contracted time charters up  to  the end  of  the current contract

for each  vessel, as well as the estimated average time charter rates for the remaining life of  the vessel
after the completion of its current contract. The revenue assumptions  exclude days  of scheduled
off-hire based on the fleet’s historical  performance and internal forecasts.  The estimated daily time
charter rates used for non-contracted revenue days  after the completion of the current  time charter are
based on a combination of (i) recent  charter  market  rates, (ii)  conditions  existing in  the LNG market
as of  the assessment date, (iii) historical average time charter rates, based on  publications by
independent third party maritime research services (‘‘maritime research publications’’), (iv) estimated
future time charter rates, based on maritime research publications  that provide  such forecasts and
(v) our internal assessment of long-term  charter rates achievable  by each class  of  vessel.  See  Note 2  to
our  consolidated financial statements included elsewhere in  this  report.

Recognizing that the LNG industry is cyclical and subject to significant volatility  based on  factors
beyond our control, management believes that  the use of  the revenue estimates discussed above  to  be
reasonable as of the reporting date. We have  assumed no inflation  nor any other revenue  escalation or
growth factors in determining forecasted  time charter rates beyond the contracted charter period
through the end of a vessel’s useful life,  consistent with  long-run historical  evidence.

We  used an annual operating expenses  escalation factor equal to 1% based  on its historical data

and experience, as well as expectations  of future inflation  and  operating and dry-docking  costs.
Estimates for the remaining useful lives  of  the current  fleet and residual and scrap values are the  same
as those used for our depreciation policy.  All estimates  used and  assumptions  made were in accordance
with our internal budgets and historical  experience  of the shipping industry.

In our impairment assessment, the rate used to discount future  estimated  cash flows to their

present  values was approximately 5.8%  to  6.4%  as of December 31, 2020 (6.5% to 7.25%  as of
December 31, 2019). This was based on an  estimated  weighted average cost of capital  calculated using
cost of equity and cost of debt components, adjusted also for vessel-specific risks and uncertainties.

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As a result of its impairment assessments for  the year ended December 31,  2020, the Group
recognized a non-cash impairment loss of  $28.6 million for  five  of  its  six Steam vessels built in 2006
and 2007 and determined there was no impairment of  the remaining Steam vessel, the 14  TFDE  vessels
and the four X-DF vessels.

In connection with the impairment testing of our vessels as  of December  31, 2020, for the 19

vessels with carrying amounts higher than  the estimated charter-free  market value, we  performed  a
sensitivity analysis on the average re-chartering  hire rate used to forecast  future  cash flows for
non-contracted days which is the most difficult, subjective, or  complex assumption  that  has the potential
to affect the outcome of the impairment  exercise.  The following table summarizes the average results
of the sensitivity analysis that we performed for the TFDE, X-DF and  Steam vessels for which no
impairment loss was recognized.

Propulsion

Average re-chartering
hire  rate  used(1)

Average break-
even re-chartering
hire rate(2)

TFDE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
X-DF . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Steam(3) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

$64,138
$75,000
$40,000

$50,646
$41,138
$39,976

Variance
(Amount)

$13,492
$33,862
24
$

Variance (%)

21.0%
45.1%
0.1%

(1)

(2)

(3)

The average re-chartering hire rate used in our impairment testing is the average re-chartering rate based on which we
estimated the revenues for the remaining useful life  of the respective vessels after the expiry of their contracted periods.

The average break-even re-chartering hire rate is the average of the contracted charter rate that, if used in the discounted
projected net operating cash flows of the impairment testing after  the expiry of each vessel’s contracted period, would result
in  discounted total cash flows being equal to the carrying value of  the vessels.

In the year ended December 31, 2019, an impairment loss of $29.5 million was recognized with respect to this vessel.

Recent  Accounting Pronouncements

See Note 2 to our consolidated financial  statements  included elsewhere in this report.

C. Research and Development, Patents  and  Licenses,  etc.

From time to time we incur expenditures relating to inspections for acquiring new  vessels. Such

expenditures are insignificant and are  expensed  as they  are incurred.

D. Trend Information

See ‘‘Item 5. Operating and Financial  Review and Prospects—Overview—Industry Overview and

Trends’’.

E. Off-Balance Sheet Arrangements

As of December 31, 2020, we do not  have any transactions, obligations or relationships  that  should

be considered off-balance sheet arrangements.

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F. Tabular Disclosure of Contractual  Obligations

Our contractual obligations as of December 31,  2020 were:

Payments Due by Period

Total

Less than
1 year

1 - 3 years

3 - 5  years

Borrowing obligations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Interest on borrowing obligations and  swaps(1)
Loan commitments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Lease obligations(2)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Shipbuilding contracts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

3,841,709
609,147
694
277,372
466,930

(Expressed in thousands of U.S. dollars)
1,574,258
812,825
258,262
160,378
239,167
133,029
—
—
694
37,271
38,032
19,189
—
—
466,930

More than
5  years

1,196,364
76,573
—
182,880
—

Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

5,195,852

878,104

1,090,024

1,771,907

1,455,817

(1)

(2)

Our  interest commitment on long-term debt is calculated based on an assumed average applicable interest rate ranging
from 1.24% to 3.18%, which takes into account average LIBOR of 0.29%, and the applicable margin spreads in our various
loan agreements.

Lease obligations related to lease liabilities of the vessel (the Methane Julia Louise), various properties, vessel
communication equipment and certain printers and  include  future  lease  charges of $81.2 million.

ITEM 6. DIRECTORS, SENIOR MANAGEMENT AND EMPLOYEES

A. Directors and Senior Management

The following table sets forth information  regarding our directors  and executive officers.  The
business address of each of our executive  officers and  directors listed below is  69 Akti Miaouli, 18537
Piraeus, Greece. Our telephone number at that address is +30 210 459 1000. Members of our board  of
directors are elected annually, and each director  elected holds office for a one-year  term. The following
directors have been determined by our  board of  directors to be independent under  the standards of the
NYSE and the rules and regulations of  the SEC: Kristin  H. Holth, Donald  J. Kintzer, Anthony  S.
Papadimitriou, Bruce L. Blythe and Julian  R. Metherell. Officers are  elected  from time  to  time by vote
of our board of directors and hold office until a  successor is elected.

Name

Age

Position

Peter G. Livanos . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Paul A. Wogan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Bruce L. Blythe . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Kristin  H. Holth(1)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Donald J. Kintzer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Julian R. Metherell
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Anthony S. Papadimitriou . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Achilleas Tasioulas(2) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Paolo Enoizi

62 Chairman and Director
58 Chief Executive Officer and Director
76 Director
65 Director
73 Director
57 Director and Vice  Chairman
65 Director
45 Chief Financial Officer
48 Chief Operating Officer

(1) Ms. Holth was appointed a director on September 16, 2020.

(2) Mr. Tasioulas was appointed Chief Financial Officer on July 1, 2020.

Certain biographical information about  each of these individuals is  set forth below.

Peter G.  Livanos is our Chairman and a member of our board of directors.  Mr. Livanos founded

our subsidiary GasLog LNG Services in 2001 and was a director of  our subsidiary GasLog Partners
from the closing of its initial public offering in  May 2014  until  June 2020. He has served as our

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Chairman since the Company was incorporated in  July 2003 and  he held the role of  chief executive
officer (‘‘CEO’’) from January 2012 until  January 2013. Mr. Livanos is the chairman of Ceres  Shipping,
an international shipping group. He also  serves  as chairman  of  several  of  Ceres Shipping’s subsidiaries,
including DryLog Ltd., a company engaged in dry  bulk shipping investments. In 1989 Mr. Livanos
formed Seachem Tankers Ltd., which  in 2000 combined with Odfjell  ASA (later renamed Odfjell  SE).
He served on the board of directors  of Odfjell  SE until  2008. Mr. Livanos was  appointed to the  board
of directors of Euronav NV, an independent owner and operator of oil tankers in  2005 and served until
December 2015. Between April 2009 and  July 2014 he was  appointed Vice-Chairman of Euronav NV
and from July 2014 to December 2015 he served as its Chairman. Mr. Livanos is a graduate of
Columbia University.

Paul A. Wogan has served as our CEO since January  2013 and has  been a  member of our board of

directors since our annual general meeting  in May  2015. Mr. Wogan was appointed to the  board of
directors of GasLog Partners in August 2020 and was appointed as the CEO of GasLog Partners in
September 2020. From 2008 until February 2012, Mr. Wogan served as senior independent director of
Clarksons PLC. From 2000 to 2008, Mr. Wogan worked for Teekay Corporation, where from November
2003 to March 2008 he served as president  of Teekay Tanker Services, with  responsibility for  the
company’s fleet of crude and product  tankers. Prior to joining  Teekay  Corporation, Mr. Wogan  served
as chief executive officer of Seachem Tankers Ltd.  From 2009 to 2014,  Mr. Wogan  was a non-executive
director of Sure Wind Marine Ltd., a  company that owns and  operates vessels  that  provide services to
the offshore wind industry. Mr. Wogan is  a  graduate of Exeter University and has an  MBA from
Cranfield School of Management.

Bruce L. Blythe has been a member of our board of directors since  October 2011. Mr. Blythe has

been involved in the shipping industry for  over 25  years,  having served  as an advisor to the  Livanos
family since 1994. For over 30 years, Mr. Blythe served  as an advisor on finance and  strategy to the
chairman and chief executive officer  of Ford Motor Company and to the  Ford family, and prior  to  his
service as an advisor he was employed  in various strategic and  financial positions at Ford Motor
Company. Mr. Blythe serves as a director of Ceres Shipping, our largest shareholder, is a director  of
DryLog Ltd. and Vice-Chairman of the  Ceres Group. Mr.  Blythe holds an  M.B.A. in finance and
transportation and a B.A. in business administration from  Pennsylvania State  University.

Kristin H. Holth has  been a member of our Board of Directors since September  2020 and was
appointed to our Audit & Risk Committee in  November 2020. From 2017  to  2020 Ms. Holth  served  as
Executive Vice President and Global Head of Ocean Industries  in DNB Bank ASA, Norway’s largest
financial services group. Ms. Holth has significant  experience in capital markets  and funding and has
held numerous management positions within DNB, including Global Head of Shipping, Offshore &
Logistics for four years and General Manager & Head of DNB Americas for six years. Ms. Holth also
holds several board positions including  Maersk Drilling,  Maersk  Tankers and  HitecVision. Ms. Holth
holds a Bachelor in Economics and Business Administration  from  BI Norwegian Business School.

Donald J. Kintzer has  been a member of our board of directors  since November 2014. He  is a
retired partner of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP,  or ‘‘PwC’’, having retired in 2008 after an association
of over 31 years. He was admitted to the  partnership in 1988 and served in various roles and locations
during his career. Mr. Kintzer is a member of the board  of directors of California Bank of Commerce
and a member of the board of governors  of Lawrence Livermore  National  Security, LLC. He was also
a member of the board of directors of  GasLog Partners  and  its  audit committee until March  2015, and
served as a member of its conflicts committee until his  appointment to our board in November 2014
and as audit committee chairman until March 2015. He is a certified public  accountant (inactive) and a
member of the American Institute of  Certified Public Accountants and  the California Society of CPAs.
Mr. Kintzer received an A.B. from Lafayette College and an  M.B.A. from Pennsylvania State
University. Prior to graduate school,  Mr. Kintzer served  as an officer in  the United States  Air Force.
Mr. Kintzer was appointed chairman  of our Audit & Risk Committee in March 2015.

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Julian R. Metherell is vice-chairman and has been a member  of  our board of directors  since
October 2011. Mr. Metherell is currently a director of MW&L  Capital; he also sits on the  board of  a
number of private companies including  Wellsafe, Natural Capital  Research and  Chairman Mentors
International. Mr. Metherell was the chief  financial officer and a director  of Genel Energy plc, a
leading independent oil and gas exploration and  production  company  operating in  the Kurdistan
Region of Iraq. Genel Energy plc is the successor  to  Vallares Plc, a publicly listed  acquisition  company
which  Mr. Metherell co-founded in April  2011. From 1999  to  2011, Mr.  Metherell  was  a partner at The
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., where he  served as chief executive officer  of  the UK investment banking
division. Prior to joining Goldman Sachs,  Mr. Metherell was a director in  the European  energy group
at Dresdner Kleinwort, a London-based  investment bank. Mr. Metherell was  appointed  to  the board  of
directors and audit committee of GasLog Partners in August  2020. Mr. Metherell  is a graduate of
Manchester University, where he received a B.Sc.  degree,  and of Cambridge University, where he
received an M.B.A.

Anthony S. Papadimitriou has  been a member of our board of directors  since November 2011,
when he was designated by the Onassis Foundation to serve as one of our directors. Mr. Papadimitriou
is the Founding partner of the law firm A.S.  Papadimitriou and Partners, of which he was the
Managing Partner from 1990 to 2018. From 1986 until 2005, Mr. Papadimitriou served  as legal counsel
for Olympic Shipping & Management  S.A, an affiliate of the  Onassis Foundation, and since 1995 he
has been the coordinator of the Executive  Committee of the commercial activities controlled by the
Onassis Foundation. In addition, Mr.  Papadimitriou  has  been a member of the board of directors of
the Alexander S. Onassis Public Benefit Foundation since 1988, serving as the president of  the Board
since 2005. Mr. Papadimitriou is a graduate of the Athens University Law School and holds a
postgraduate degree in maritime and  transport  law  from the University of Aix-en-Provence, a B.Sc.
from the London School of Economics and a Ph.D. from the National and Kapodistrian University of
Athens. Mr. Papadimitriou was appointed  to  the Board of GasLog Partners in May 2015 and stepped
down on January 31, 2019.

Achilleas Tasioulas has  served as our CFO and CFO of  GasLog Partners since  July  2020. He

joined GasLog in October 2014 as Financial Controller and his role was expanded to Chief Risk
Officer, Financial Controller and Head of Tax in August 2017 and Deputy CFO of GasLog in
December 2019 and has over 13 years of experience in the  shipping industry. During his years with
GasLog he has been actively engaged in our  growth, capital markets  activity and has developed
considerable experience in operations,  corporate finance, treasury and risk management.  Achilleas is
also a Board Member of Gastrade and a Director  of several Group  subsidiaries. Immediately prior to
joining GasLog, Achilleas was Corporate Controller for NYSE-listed Danaos Corporation  for 6  years.
He is an ICAEW Fellow Chartered Accountant,  has an MSc  in Project Analysis, Finance and
Investments from the University of York  and a BSc  in Economics from the University of Macedonia in
Greece. Furthermore, he has completed  executive education  programs in Advance Corporate Finance
in London Business School and Strategic Financial Leadership in  Stanford  University  Graduate School
of Business.

Paolo Enoizi joined GasLog in August 2019 and was appointed Chief Operating  Officer  (‘‘COO’’)

in September 2019. He was appointed COO of  GasLog Partners on  the same date. Prior to joining
GasLog, Mr. Enoizi was most recently Managing  Director of Stolt Tankers  BV  Rotterdam,  a subsidiary
of Stolt Nielsen Limited, where he was responsible for  the  operation of over 100 chemical  tankers, 200
people ashore and over 4,000 seafarers. Mr.  Enoizi’s previous roles  also  included  Director of
Technical & Innovation and General Manager of Newbuilding  & Technical. Whilst at Stolt Nielsen,
Mr. Enoizi led major business transformations, integration of company  acquisitions and operational
improvement initiatives in areas such as process  optimisation,  cost reductions, digitalisation and
business intelligence. Prior to joining Stolt Nielsen  in 2008, Mr. Enoizi was  Managing  Director of a
family-owned ship management company. Mr. Enoizi is  a  director of HiLo Maritime  Risk Management

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Limited, a not for profit joint industry  initiative which  uses a predictive mathematical model to enhance
shipping industry safety. Mr. Enoizi has  a  Masters degree in Naval  Architecture and  Marine
Engineering from the University of Genova.

Board Leadership Structure

Our board leadership structure consists of our Chairman, the  vice  chairman and the chairmen of
our  board committees. Our operational  management is  headed by  our CEO.  Mr.  Wogan, as CEO, is
responsible for the day-to-day operations of the Company, which includes decisions  relating to the
Company’s general management and  control  of  its  affairs and  business and works with our board in
developing our business strategy. The board of directors does  not  have a  policy mandating  that  the
roles of CEO and Chairman be held by  separate individuals,  but  believes that the  separation of such
roles at this time is appropriate and beneficial to shareholders.

B. Compensation of Directors and Senior Management

Our non-executive directors receive:

(cid:127) an annual fee of $132,000;

(cid:127) additional annual fees of $50,000 to the chairman  of the board, $50,000 to the  chairman of the
audit and risk committee and $30,000 to the chairmen of the compensation committee  and
safety and sustainability committee; and

(cid:127) additional annual fees of $25,000 to each member of the audit and  risk  committee and $20,000
to each member of the compensation  committee and safety and sustainability committee (in
each  case other than the chairmen of such committees); and

The aggregate annual fees paid to non-executive directors  in 2020  was $1.1 million.

The board of directors may determine  that  a portion of the above  fees  will  be  paid in shares

rather than cash.

In addition, our directors receive reimbursement for their  out-of-pocket expenses including travel

costs. We do not have any service contracts with our directors that provide for benefits upon
termination of their services.

For 2020, our executive officers were Paul Wogan, Alastair Maxwell (CFO  to  June  30, 2020),
Achilleas Tasioulas (CFO from July 1, 2020) and Paolo Enoizi. Compensation for our executive officers
in 2020 consisted of base salary and  employee  benefits that are generally  provided  to  employees,
including eligibility to receive a cash  incentive bonus  pursuant to our  Management Incentive Plan, or
‘‘MIP’’. The MIP provides all shore-based  personnel (which includes our  executive officers) an
opportunity to earn a cash incentive payment, subject to the  achievement of pre-established individual
and Company performance objectives, as  well as a component based on Company discretion. Each
participant’s target payout and the weightings  assigned to the individual and Company  performance
objectives and the Company discretionary component are dependent  on the participant’s organization
level.  No amounts will be paid under  the  MIP  to  any  participant who fails to achieve 50.0% of his or
her target individual performance objectives. Company performance  is measured  against a  number of
key business indicators (KBI’s), multiplied by a  Company Safety Factor, the  results of which are
overlaid  with Board Discretion. Since  2020, the  following  KBIs  are in  place: a) Free Cash Flow per
Share target (17,5%), b) Absolute Return on  Invested Capital target  (17.5%), c)  Commercial
Performance (25%), d) Operating Expenses (20%) and e) Vessel  uptime (20%). An additional KBI,
ESG as competitive advantage, has been  introduced but in 2020 had a weight  of  0%.

The Company Safety factor is based on Personal Safety, Significant Incidents  and Leading
Indicators, in which falling short of the  safety target may result  in a corresponding reduction of  the

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Company performance payout factor.  Under  the individual and Company performance objectives,
stretch goals are established which determine the level of pay-out.  The  Board may exercise discretion
to increase an individual’s payment to no  more than 200.0%  of  his or her target payout. The  amounts
paid to our executive officers in 2020 pursuant to the MIP were  determined based  on the  following
weightings: Individual performance (30.0%), Company  performance  (50.0%) and Company discretion
(20.0%).

The aggregate amount of cash compensation, including cash  incentive compensation, paid  to  our

executive officers for the year ended December 31,  2020 was $4.1 million.

In addition, our executive officers received  equity-based  compensation awards in accordance  with

the 2013 Omnibus Incentive Compensation Plan, or  the ‘‘Plan’’,’’. On  April 1, 2020, we granted  our
executive officers an aggregate of 156,539  performance stock units  and 156,539  restricted stock units
under the Plan. The performance stock  units vest following the completion of a 3 years period
(01.01.2020-31.12.2023), subject to certain  performance targets and the recipient’s continued service.
The restricted stock units vest incrementally over  three years subject  to  the  recipient’s continued
service. The performance stock units  and  the restricted  stock units may be settled in cash or common
shares, or a combination thereof, at our  discretion. We generally determine during the  March meeting
of the board of the directors each year which individuals, if any, will be eligible to receive  equity-based
compensation awards under the Plan  for such year and  the amount of awards each  participant will be
eligible to receive. In addition, we intend  to  grant such awards  on April 1 of such year  (or,  should
April 1 of such year fall on a weekend or  bank holiday, on the first business day thereafter).

We  did not set aside or accrue any amounts in  the year  ended December 31, 2020  to  provide

pension, retirement or similar benefits to our directors or executive officers.

C. Board Practices

Our board of directors consists of seven members. The board of directors may change  the number

of directors to not less than three, nor  more than fifteen. Each director shall  be  elected  to  serve until
the next annual meeting of shareholders or until their successor is elected or appointed, except in the
event of removal, death, disability, disqualification or resignation. A vacancy on  the board  created by
removal, death, disability, disqualification  or  resignation of a director, or as  a result of  an increase in
the size of the board, may be filled by  the shareholders or  by the board of directors.

We  are a ‘‘foreign private issuer’’ under the securities laws of the United States and the rules of

the NYSE. Under the securities laws  of  the United States, ‘‘foreign private issuers’’ are subject  to
different disclosure requirements than U.S. domiciled  registrants, as well  as different financial  reporting
requirements. Under the NYSE rules, a  ‘‘foreign  private issuer’’ is subject  to  less  stringent corporate
governance requirements. Subject to  certain  exceptions, the rules of the  NYSE permit a ‘‘foreign
private  issuer’’ to follow its home country practice  in lieu of the listing  requirements of the  NYSE,
including (i) the requirement that a nominating/corporate governance  committee be established  and
(ii) the requirement of an annual performance evaluation of the compensation committee. We do not
have a separate nominating/corporate  governance committee  and we complete biennial performance
evaluation of the compensation committee. As a result,  non-independent directors may, among other
things, participate in resolving governance  issues  regarding our  Company. Accordingly, in the  future
you may not have the same protections afforded to shareholders of  companies that are subject to all of
the NYSE corporate governance requirements.

Our board of directors meets regularly throughout the year. In 2020, the  board met 15  times. As
part of our board meetings, our independent directors meet without the non-independent directors in
attendance. In addition, the board regularly holds sessions  without  the CEO  and executive officers
present.

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Committees of the Board of Directors

Audit and Risk Committee

Our audit and risk committee consists of Ms. Holth and Messrs.  Blythe and Kintzer  with

Mr. Kintzer serving as the committee  chairman. Our  board  of  directors has  affirmatively  determined
that each of these individuals meets the definition of ‘‘independent director’’ for  purposes of serving  on
an audit  committee under applicable  SEC and NYSE rules. Mr. Kintzer qualifies as an  ‘‘audit
committee financial expert’’. The audit  and risk committee is  responsible for:

(cid:127) the appointment and compensation (subject to any required shareholder approval or

authorization) and retention and oversight of  independent auditors and determining whether any
non-audit services  will be performed by such  auditor;

(cid:127) assisting the board of directors in overseeing  our  financial reporting process, the integrity of our
financial statements, the independent  auditors’ qualifications, independence and  performance,
the performance of our internal audit and financial risk management  groups and our  compliance
with legal and regulatory requirements;

(cid:127) annually reviewing the independent auditors’  report describing  the auditing  firm’s  internal

quality-control procedures, and any material issues raised by the most recent  internal quality-
control review, or  peer review, of the auditing  firm;

(cid:127) discussing with management and the independent  auditors, and making  recommendations to our

board regarding the approval of, the annual audited  financial  statements and  any periodic
financial statements;

(cid:127) discussing earnings press releases, as well  as financial information and earnings  guidance
provided to analysts and rating agencies, with management and the  independent auditors;

(cid:127) discussing policies with respect to financial  risk  assessment and risk  management and monitoring

our  financial risk and risk management  systems;

(cid:127) meeting periodically and separately with management, our  internal audit  group and  the

independent auditors;

(cid:127) reviewing with the independent auditors any audit  problems or difficulties  and management’s

responses;

(cid:127) setting clear hiring policies for employees or  former employees  of the independent auditors;

(cid:127) annually reviewing the adequacy of  the audit and risk  committee’s  written  charter;

(cid:127) periodically reviewing the budget, responsibilities and organizational  structure of the internal

audit department;

(cid:127) establishing procedures for the consideration of all  related-party transactions,  including matters

involving potential conflicts of interest;

(cid:127) reporting regularly to the full board of directors;  and

(cid:127) handling such other matters that are specifically delegated to the audit and risk  committee by

the board of directors from time to time.

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Compensation Committee

Our compensation committee consists of Messrs. Blythe, Papadimitriou and Metherell,  with
Mr. Blythe serving as the committee  chairman.  The  compensation  committee is responsible for:

(cid:127) making recommendations to the full board of directors with respect to  the compensation of
directors, senior management, the head of internal  audit and other managerial employees
reporting to the CEO;

(cid:127) overseeing and making recommendations to the full board of directors  with respect to any of the

Company’s long-term incentive plans,  including  any equity-based compensation plans to be
adopted; and

(cid:127) handling such other matters that are specifically delegated to the compensation committee by

the board of directors from time to time.

Safety and Sustainability Committee

Our safety and sustainability committee consists of Messrs.  Metherell and Livanos, with
Mr. Metherell serving as the committee  chairman. The safety and sustainability committee is
responsible for:

(cid:127) overseeing and reviewing on an annual basis  the Company’s key policies in  relation  to  safety and

sustainability (including those relating  to  operational risks);

(cid:127) overseeing and reviewing the development of the Company’s Environmental, Social and

Governance (‘‘ESG’’) strategy;

(cid:127) reviewing the Company’s compliance with relevant legislation, regulation  and recommendations

for safety and sustainability in all operational areas;

(cid:127) ensuring the appropriate training is provided  for employees in relation to safety  and

sustainability;

(cid:127) receiving reports from management relating  to  any  serious accidents or fatalities  and reviewing

recommended actions to be taken by management in connection therewith; and

(cid:127) monitoring the integrity and effectiveness of the non-financial statements  of the Company  and

any other formal communications relating to the Company’s performance  in safety and
sustainability.

Corporate Governance

The board of directors and our Company’s management engage in an ongoing review  of  our
corporate governance practices in order to oversee  our  compliance with  the applicable corporate
governance rules of the NYSE and the SEC.

We  have adopted a Code of Business Conduct and Ethics  for all directors, officers, employees and

agents of  the Company.

This document and other important  information  on our governance  are posted  on our website and
may be viewed at  http://www.gaslogltd.com.  The information contained on or connected to our  website is
not a part of this annual report. We  will  also provide  a paper copy of any of these documents upon the
written request of a shareholder at no cost. Shareholders may direct their requests to the attention  of
our  General Counsel, c/o GasLog LNG  Services Ltd., 69  Akti  Miaouli, 18537 Piraeus, Greece.

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Exemptions from NYSE Corporate Governance Rules

Because we qualify as a foreign private issuer  under SEC  rules,  we  are  permitted to follow the

corporate governance practices of Bermuda (the jurisdiction in which we  are incorporated) in lieu  of
certain NYSE corporate governance  requirements that would  otherwise be applicable to us. The NYSE
rules do not require foreign private issuers like us to establish  a nominating/corporate governance
committee. Similarly, under Bermuda law, we  are not required to have a nominating/corporate
governance committee. Accordingly,  we  do not have a  nominating/corporate governance committee.

D. Employees

As of December 31, 2020, we had 170  full-time employees and contractors based  in our offices in

Piraeus, Monaco, London, New Jersey,  Singapore and the newbuildings site  in South Korea. In
addition to our shore-based employees  and contractors, we  had  approximately  1,866 seafaring staff
serving on our owned and managed ships. These seafarers are  retained through crewing agencies based
in Ukraine, the Philippines and Spain or, in  the case of Greek seafarers,  through  direct hire. As we
take delivery of our newbuildings, we expect to recruit  a significant number of  additional seafarers
qualified to staff and operate our new  ships, as  well as a  small number of additional shore-based
personnel. We intend to focus our seafarer  hiring  efforts in the  Ukraine, the Philippines  and Spain,
where  we have crewing agency agreements in  place, and in Greece.

LNG marine transportation is a specialized area requiring technically skilled officers and personnel

with specialized training. Attracting and  retaining  motivated, well-qualified seagoing and shore-based
personnel is a top priority, and we offer our people competitive compensation packages and training
and development opportunities. In addition, we provide intensive onboard training  for our officers  and
crews to instill a culture focused on the highest operational  and safety  standards. As a result,  we have
historically enjoyed high retention rates. In 2020, our retention rate was 97%  for senior seagoing
officers, 94% for other seagoing officers  and 97.17% for shore staff.

Although we have historically experienced high employee  retention rates, the demand for

technically skilled officers and crews  to  serve on LNG carriers and  FSRU vessels, and for shore-based
employees with experience of operating and managing LNG  vessels,  has been increasing as  the global
fleet of LNG vessels continues to grow.  This increased demand has  and  may  continue to put
inflationary cost pressure on ensuring  qualified and well-trained crew are available to GasLog.
However, we expect that the impact  of cost increases would  be  mitigated  to some extent by certain
provisions in some of our time charters,  including automatic periodic adjustment and cost review
provisions.

E. Share Ownership

The common shares beneficially owned  by  our directors and executive officers and/or entities

affiliated  with these individuals is disclosed  in ‘‘Item 7.  Major Shareholders  and Related Party
Transactions—A. Major Shareholders’’  below. For  information  regarding arrangements  for involving the
employees in the capital of the Company,  see ‘‘Item 6. Directors, Senior Management and
Employees—B. Compensation of Directors  and Senior  Management’’.

ITEM 7. MAJOR SHAREHOLDERS AND RELATED  PARTY TRANSACTIONS

A. Major Shareholders

The following table sets forth certain information regarding the  beneficial ownership of our

outstanding common shares as of March  1,  2021 held by:

(cid:127) each of our executive officers;

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(cid:127) each of our directors;

(cid:127) all our directors and officers as a group; and

(cid:127) each holder known to us to beneficially own 5.0% or more of  our shares;

Beneficial ownership is determined in accordance with SEC rules. Percentage  computations are
based on 95,192,812 common shares outstanding as of March 1, 2021. Each issued and outstanding
common share will entitle the shareholder to one vote. Information  for certain  holders is based on
their latest filings with the SEC or information delivered to us.  Except as noted below, the address of
all shareholders, officers and directors identified in  the table and the accompanying footnotes below  is
in care of our principal executive offices.

Name of Beneficial Owner

Directors and officers
Peter G. Livanos(1) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Paul A. Wogan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Bruce L. Blythe . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Paolo Enoizi
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Donald J. Kintzer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Julian R. Metherell
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Anthony S. Papadimitriou . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
All directors and officers as a group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Other 5.0% beneficial owners
Alexander S. Onassis Foundation(2)

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Common Shares
Beneficially Owned

Number

Percent

39,419,544
*
1,200,000
*
*
*
*
40,788.013

41.4%
*
1.3%
*
*
*
*
42.8%

11,164,904

11.7%

(1)

(2)

By virtue of common shares held (a)  directly, (b) indirectly  through Blenheim Holdings, in which Mr. Livanos
has a majority ownership interest, (c) indirectly  through several entities whose share capital is owned by
Mr. Livanos and (d) by several entities of  which Mr. Livanos and/or members of his family are beneficiaries and
for which Mr. Livanos serves as an officer and/or a  board member. Mr.  Livanos disclaims beneficial ownership
of the shares held by the entities referenced  in (d). Mr.  Livanos can effectively control the Company through
direct and indirect ownership interests. Mr. Livanos’s ownership  interest changed in connection with the
purchase by Blenheim Holdings of certain outstanding manager shares  in January 2012, a transfer by Blenheim
Holdings of 657,090 shares to one of its minority shareholders in March 2014 in exchange for such shareholder’s
interest in Blenheim Holdings, and the vesting of 30,527  Restricted Stock Units in April 2017.

By virtue of common shares held indirectly through its  wholly owned  subsidiary, Olympic LNG Investments Ltd.
A portion of the shares were acquired  from the Company  in a  private placement in January 2014. The
Alexander S. Onassis Public Benefit Foundation is  the sole beneficiary of the assets and income of the Onassis
Foundation, and as a result may be deemed to have indirect beneficial ownership of the shares.

*

Less than 1.0%.

In March 2012, we completed a registered public  offering  of  our common shares  and our common

shares began  trading on the NYSE. Our  major shareholders have the  same voting  rights as our other
shareholders. As of February 24, 2021, we had approximately 11,807 shareholders.

B. Related Party Transactions

Relationship with GasLog Partners

GasLog Partners was formed by us in January  2014 to acquire,  own and  operate LNG carriers
engaged in LNG transportation under  long-term charters, which  we define  as charters of five full years
or more. In May 2014, the Partnership completed its  initial  public offering and its common units  began
trading on the NYSE.

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On November 10, 2020, the Partnership announced its  intention  to  engage with an  independent
advisor  to assess its strategic alternatives. After a  comprehensive analysis of the  Partnership’s corporate
structure, assets, financial position, competitive environment  and current and expected  commercial
market, it was concluded that:

(cid:127) The Partnership will maintain its current corporate structure with GasLog as  its general partner;

(cid:127) The Partnership will continue to pursue  an independent  commercial and  operational strategy of

owning,  operating, and acquiring LNG carriers; and

(cid:127) Strategy remains an ongoing focus of  our  board of  directors and we  are open to entertaining all
value-enhancing options for the business as we continue  to  reduce debt  and  enhance liquidity.

The Partnership conducts its operations through its vessel-owning subsidiaries and as of  March 1,
2021, had a fleet of 15 LNG carriers.  As  of March  1, 2021, we hold a 35.3% ownership interest in the
Partnership and, as a result of our ownership of  the general  partner and the fact that the  general
partner elects the majority of the Partnership’s directors in accordance  with the Partnership Agreement,
we have the ability to control the Partnership’s affairs and  policies.

Quarterly Cash Dividends

We  are entitled to distributions on our general and limited  partner  interests in GasLog Partners.

These interests consist of common units  and  general  partner interests. Following a  challenging  number
of years for capital markets in midstream  energy, along with declining visibility in to the  Partnership’s
future financial performance exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic related uncertainty in the near
term LNG and LNG shipping markets,  the Partnership’s board  of directors decided to reduce  its
quarterly cash distributions on common  units to $0.01 per unit from the third quarter of 2020.

As holder of the 2.0% general partner interest in GasLog Partners, we  are entitled to 2.0% of all
distributions made by GasLog Partners prior  to  its  liquidation. The  general partner, our wholly  owned
subsidiary, has the right, but not the obligation,  to  contribute a  proportionate amount of capital to
GasLog Partners to maintain its 2.0% general  partner interest  if the Partnership issues additional units.

We  received total distributions from GasLog Partners of $12.7 million in 2020.

Omnibus Agreement

On May 12, 2014, we entered into an  omnibus agreement with GasLog Partners  and certain of  its

subsidiaries. The following discussion  describes certain provisions of the  omnibus  agreement.

Noncompetition; Five-Year Vessel Restricted  Business Opportunities

Under the omnibus agreement, we have agreed, and have caused our controlled affiliates (other
than GasLog  Partners, its general partner  and  its subsidiaries)  to  agree,  not to acquire, own,  operate  or
charter any LNG carrier with a cargo capacity greater  than 75,000 cbm engaged in oceangoing LNG
transportation under a charter for five  full  years  or more without, within  30 calendar days after  the
consummation of the acquisition or the  commencement  of the operations or charter of such a vessel,
notifying and offering GasLog Partners  the opportunity to purchase  such a vessel at fair market value.
For purposes of this section, we refer to these vessels, together with any related charters, as  ‘‘Five-Year
Vessels’’ and to all other LNG carriers, together with  any related charters, as ‘‘Non-Five-Year  Vessels’’.
The restrictions in this paragraph will  not  prevent  us  or any  of our controlled affiliates (other than
GasLog Partners and its subsidiaries)  from:

(1) acquiring, owning, operating or chartering Non-Five-Year  Vessels;

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(2) acquiring one or more Five-Year Vessels if we  promptly offer to sell the  vessel  to  GasLog

Partners  for the acquisition price plus  any administrative costs (including re-flagging and
reasonable legal costs) associated with the  transfer to GasLog Partners at the time of the
acquisition;

(3) putting a Non-Five-Year Vessel under charter for five full years or more  if  we offer to sell  the
vessel to GasLog Partners for fair market value (x) promptly after  the time  it becomes a
Five-Year Vessel and (y) at each renewal or extension of that charter for  five full  years  or
more;

(4) acquiring one or more Five-Year Vessels as part of the  acquisition  of  a controlling interest in

a business or package of assets and owning, operating or chartering those vessels; provided,
however, that:

(a) if less than a majority of the value of the business or  assets  acquired is attributable to

Five-Year Vessels, as determined in good faith by our board of directors,  we must offer to
sell such vessels to GasLog Partners for their fair market value  plus any  additional  tax or
other similar costs that we incur in connection  with the  acquisition  and  the  transfer  of
such vessels to GasLog Partners separate from the  acquired  business;  and

(b) if a majority or more of the value of the business or  assets  acquired is attributable to

Five-Year Vessels, as determined in good faith by our board of directors,  we must notify
GasLog Partners of the proposed acquisition in  advance. Not later  than 30 days following
receipt of such notice, GasLog Partners will notify us if it wishes to acquire such  vessels
in cooperation and simultaneously with us  acquiring the  Non-Five-Year Vessels. If
GasLog Partners does not notify us of  its intent to pursue the  acquisition  within 30 days,
we may proceed with the acquisition and  then offer to sell  such vessels to GasLog
Partners  as provided in (a) above;

(5) acquiring a non-controlling equity ownership, voting or profit participation interest in any

company, business or pool of assets;

(6) acquiring, owning, operating or chartering any  Five-Year Vessel  if GasLog Partners does not

fulfill its obligation to purchase such vessel in accordance with the terms of any  existing or
future agreement;

(7) acquiring, owning, operating or chartering a Five-Year  Vessel subject  to  the offers  to  GasLog
Partners  described in paragraphs (2),  (3) and (4) above  pending  its  determination whether to
accept such offers and pending the closing of  any offers it accepts;

(8) providing ship management services relating to any vessel;

(9) owning or operating any Five-Year Vessel that we  owned on  the closing date  of  GasLog

Partners’  IPO and that was not part of its fleet as  of such date;  or

(10) acquiring, owning, operating or chartering a Five-Year  Vessel if GasLog Partners  has

previously advised us that it consents to such acquisition, ownership, operation or charter.

If we  or any of our controlled affiliates (other than GasLog  Partners, its general  partner or  its

subsidiaries) acquires, owns, operates or charters  Five-Year Vessels pursuant to any of the exceptions
described above, we may not subsequently expand that portion of our business other than  pursuant to
those exceptions. However, such Five-Year Vessels could eventually compete  with GasLog  Partners’
vessels upon their re-chartering.

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In addition, under the omnibus agreement  GasLog  Partners  has agreed,  and has  caused its

subsidiaries to agree, to acquire, own, operate  or charter  Five-Year Vessels only. The restrictions in this
paragraph will not:

(1) prevent GasLog Partners or any  of its subsidiaries from owning, operating or  chartering any

Non-Five-Year Vessel that was previously a  Five-Year Vessel while owned by GasLog Partners
or any of its subsidiaries;

(2) prevent GasLog Partners or any  of its subsidiaries from acquiring Non-Five-Year Vessels as

part of the acquisition of a controlling  interest in a business or package of  assets and owning,
operating or chartering those vessels;  provided, however, that:

(a) if less than a majority of the value of the business or  assets  acquired is attributable to

Non-Five-Year Vessels, as determined in  good faith by GasLog Partners,  the Partnership
must offer to sell such vessels to us for  their  fair market value plus  any  additional tax or
other similar costs that GasLog Partners incurs  in connection with the acquisition and the
transfer of such vessels to us separate from  the acquired business; and

(b) if a majority or more of the value of the business or  assets  acquired is attributable to

Non-Five-Year Vessels, as determined in  good faith by GasLog Partners,  the Partnership
must notify us of the proposed acquisition  in advance. Not later than 30 days  following
receipt of such notice, we must notify GasLog  Partners  if we wish  to  acquire the
Non-Five-Year Vessels in cooperation and simultaneously  with GasLog Partners acquiring
the Five-Year Vessels. If we do not notify GasLog Partners  of  our intent to pursue the
acquisition within 30 days, the Partnership may  proceed with  the acquisition and  then
offer to sell such vessels to us as provided in (a) above;

(3) prevent GasLog Partners or any  of its subsidiaries from acquiring, owning, operating or

chartering any Non-Five-Year Vessels subject  to  the offer  to us described in  paragraph (2)
above, pending our determination whether to accept such offer and pending  the closing of any
offer we accept; or

(4) prevent GasLog Partners or any  of its subsidiaries from acquiring, owning, operating or
chartering Non-Five-Year Vessels if we have previously advised the  Partnership that we
consent to such acquisition, ownership, operation or  charter.

If GasLog Partners or any of its subsidiaries acquires, owns,  operates or charters Non-Five-Year
Vessels pursuant to any of the exceptions  described above, neither the Partnership nor any subsidiary
may subsequently expand that portion  of  its  business other than pursuant  to  those exceptions.

During  the 30-day period after our notice  and  offer of an opportunity to purchase a  Five-Year
Vessel, we and GasLog Partners will  negotiate in good faith to reach an agreement on the fair  market
value (and any applicable break-up costs)  of  the relevant vessel.  If we do not reach an agreement
within such 30-day period, a mutually-agreed upon  investment banking firm, ship broker or  other expert
advisor  will be engaged to determine the  fair market value (and any  applicable break-up costs) of  the
relevant vessel and other outstanding terms, and GasLog Partners will  have the option, but  not  the
obligation, to purchase the relevant vessel on  such terms.  GasLog  Partners’ ability to consummate  the
acquisition of such Five-Year Vessel from  us will be subject to obtaining  any consents  of  governmental
authorities and other non-affiliated third parties  and  to  all  agreements existing  with respect to such
Five-Year Vessel. Under the omnibus agreement, we  will indemnify GasLog  Partners against losses
arising from the failure to obtain any  consent  or governmental permit necessary to own or operate the
fleet in  substantially the same manner that the vessels were owned and operated  by  us immediately
prior to the Partnership’s acquisition of such vessels. See ‘‘—Indemnification’’.

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Upon a change of control of GasLog Partners or its general partner,  the noncompetition

provisions of the omnibus agreement  will  terminate immediately.  Upon  a change of control of GasLog,
the noncompetition provisions of the omnibus agreement applicable to us will terminate on the date of
the change of control. On the date on  which a  majority of GasLog Partners’  directors ceases to consist
of directors that were (1) appointed by  the Partnership’s general partner prior to its first annual
meeting  of unitholders and (2) recommended for  election by  a majority of the Partnership’s  appointed
directors, the noncompetition provisions applicable to us shall terminate immediately. The Merger
Agreement between GasLog and GEPIF will not result in a change of control of GasLog  Partners due
to the Rolling Shareholders maintaining the  majority of the outstanding common shares of GasLog
post the Transaction.

LNG Carrier Purchase Options

Under the omnibus agreement entered  into  with GasLog Partners and certain of its subsidiaries in

connection with the Partnership’s initial  public offering, GasLog Partners has the option to purchase
from us any LNG carrier with a cargo capacity greater than 75,000 cbm engaged in  oceangoing LNG
transportation under a charter for five  full  years  or more, within  30 calendar days  after the
consummation of the acquisition or the  commencement  of the operations or charter of such a vessel.

On January 12, 2018, GasLog entered into a  shipbuilding contract with Samsung for  the  GasLog

Windsor. This  vessel will now be the vessel to be chartered to Pioneer  Shipping Limited, a wholly
owned subsidiary of Centrica for an initial  period of approximately seven years, as  previously
announced on October 20, 2016. Within 30 days of the commencement  of  the charter  of the  GasLog
Windsor, we will be required to offer GasLog  Partners the  opportunity  to  purchase the vessel at fair
market value  as determined pursuant  to  the  omnibus  agreement.

On May 30, 2018, we signed an agreement with Centrica  for  the GasLog Westminster to be
chartered to Centrica upon delivery in 2020  for  an initial  term  of  seven  years.  Within 30  days of the
commencement of the charter of the  GasLog Westminster, we will be required to offer GasLog  Partners
the opportunity to purchase the vessel at fair market value as determined pursuant  to  the omnibus
agreement. On August 16, 2018, we signed an  agreement  with Cheniere for the  GasLog Georgetown
and the GasLog Galveston to be chartered to Cheniere upon delivery in  2020 for initial  terms of seven
years. Furthermore, on December 21,  2018, we signed two additional agreements with  Cheniere  for
newbuildings Hull Nos. 2311 and 2312 to be chartered  to  Cheniere upon delivery in 2021  for initial
terms of seven years. Within 30 days  of the  commencement of each of  the  charters,  we will be required
to offer GasLog Partners the opportunity to purchase the  vessel at fair  market value as determined
pursuant to the omnibus agreement.

On March 15, 2019, we signed an agreement with Endesa for  the GasLog Warsaw to be chartered

to Endesa from May 2021 for an initial term of eight years. Within 30 days of the commencement of
the charter of the GasLog Warsaw, we will be required to offer GasLog Partners the  opportunity  to
purchase the  vessel at fair market value as determined pursuant to the omnibus agreement.

On March 28, 2019, we signed an agreement with  JERA for the  GasLog Wales to be chartered to
JERA upon delivery in 2020 for an initial  term of  twelve  years.  Within 30  days of the commencement
of the charter of Hull No. 2274, we will  be required  to  offer  GasLog Partners the opportunity  to
purchase the vessel at fair market value as determined  pursuant  to  the omnibus agreement.

On August 27, 2019, we signed an agreement with Sinolam for the GasLog Singapore. The vessel is

expected to commence its charter to Sinolam after the vessel’s dry-docking and conversion to an FSU.
Within 30 days of the commencement  of the  charter of the GasLog Singapore, we will be required to
offer GasLog Partners the opportunity to purchase the  vessel at fair  market value as determined
pursuant to the omnibus agreement.

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In each case, GasLog Partners’ option to purchase is at fair market value as determined pursuant
to the omnibus agreement. If we and  GasLog  Partners  are unable to agree upon the fair market  value
of any of these optional vessels, the respective fair  market  values will be determined by a mutually
acceptable investment banking firm, ship  broker or other expert advisor, and  GasLog Partners will have
the right, but not the obligation, to purchase  the vessel  at such price. GasLog Partners’ ability to
consummate the acquisition of such vessels from us  will be subject to obtaining any  consents  of
governmental authorities and other non-affiliated third parties and to all agreements existing as of the
closing date in respect of such vessels.

On the date on which a majority of GasLog Partners’ directors ceases  to  consist of  directors that
were (1) appointed by the Partnership’s  general partner prior to its first annual meeting of unitholders
and (2)  recommended for election by  a  majority of the Partnership’s  appointed  directors, the  LNG
carrier purchase options shall terminate  immediately.

Rights of First Offer

Under the omnibus agreement, we and  our subsidiaries have  granted to GasLog Partners a right of
first offer on any proposed sale, transfer  or other disposition of any  Five-Year Vessels  or Non-Five-Year
Vessels owned by us. Under the omnibus agreement, GasLog  Partners  and its subsidiaries have  agreed
to grant a similar right of first offer to  us  for any Five-Year  Vessels they might own.  These rights of
first offer will not  apply to a (i) sale, transfer or other disposition of vessels between any affiliated
subsidiaries or pursuant to the terms of  any  current or  future charter or other agreement with  a charter
party or (ii) merger with or into, or sale  of substantially  all of the assets to, an  unaffiliated  third  party.

Prior to engaging in any negotiation regarding  any vessel disposition  with respect  to  a Five-Year
Vessel with an unaffiliated third party or any Non-Five-Year Vessel,  we or  GasLog  Partners,  as the case
may be, will deliver a written notice to the other relevant party setting forth the  material  terms and
conditions of the proposed transaction. During the  30-day period after the delivery of such notice, we
and GasLog Partners, as the case may  be,  will negotiate  in good faith  to  reach an  agreement on the
transaction. If we do not reach an agreement within such 30-day  period,  we or GasLog Partners, as the
case may be, will be able within the next  180 calendar days  to  sell,  transfer,  dispose or re-charter the
vessel to a third party (or to agree in  writing to undertake such transaction with a  third party) on terms
generally no less favorable to us or GasLog Partners, as the  case may be, than  those offered pursuant
to the written notice. Our ability to consummate the  acquisition  of such Five-Year Vessel from  GasLog
Partners  will be subject to obtaining any  consents of governmental authorities and  other  non-affiliated
third parties and to all agreements existing  in respect of such Five-Year Vessel.

Upon a change of control of GasLog Partners or its general partner,  the right  of  first  offer
provisions of the omnibus agreement  will  terminate immediately.  Upon  a change of control of us,  the
right of first offer provisions applicable to GasLog under the omnibus agreement  will terminate  on the
date  of  the change of control. On the date  on which a majority of GasLog Partners’  directors ceases  to
consist of directors that were (i) appointed by  the Partnership’s general partner prior to its first annual
meeting  of unitholders and (ii) recommended for  election by  a majority of the Partnership’s  appointed
directors, the provisions related to the  rights of first offer granted to the Partnership  by  us shall
terminate immediately.

For purposes of the omnibus agreement, a ‘‘change  of  control’’ means,  with respect to any

‘‘applicable person’’, any of the following  events: (a) any sale, lease,  exchange or other  transfer  (in  one
transaction or a series of related transactions) of all or  substantially  all of the applicable person’s assets
to any other person, unless immediately  following such  sale, lease,  exchange or  other transfer such
assets are owned, directly or indirectly,  by the  applicable  person;  (b) the  consolidation or merger of the
applicable person with or into another person pursuant to a transaction in  which the outstanding voting
securities of the applicable person are changed into or exchanged for cash, securities or other property,

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other than any such transaction where  (i) the outstanding  voting securities of the applicable person are
changed into or exchanged for voting securities of the surviving person  or its parent and (ii) the  holders
of the voting securities of the applicable  person immediately  prior to such transaction  own, directly or
indirectly, not less than a majority of the  outstanding voting securities  of  the surviving  person or its
parent immediately after such transaction; and  (c) a ‘‘person’’  or  ‘‘group’’ (within the  meaning of
Sections 13(d) or 14(d)(2) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934,  or the ‘‘Exchange  Act’’), other than
us or our affiliates with respect to the general partner, being or becoming  the ‘‘beneficial owner’’  (as
defined in Rules 13d-3 and 13d-5 under the Exchange  Act) of more  than 50.0%  of all of the then
outstanding voting securities of the applicable  person, except in a merger  or consolidation which  would
not constitute a change of control under  clause  (b) above.

Indemnification

Under the omnibus agreement, we will  indemnify GasLog  Partners after the closing of its IPO for

a period of five years (and we will indemnify  the Partnership for a period of at least three years after
its  purchase of any vessels subject to purchase options,  if  applicable) against certain environmental  and
toxic tort liabilities with respect to the  vessels  that  are contributed or sold to the Partnership to the
extent arising prior to the time such  vessels were contributed or  sold  to  the  Partnership. Liabilities
resulting from a change in law after  the closing of the IPO are excluded  from the environmental
indemnity. There is an aggregate cap of  $5 million on the amount of indemnity coverage provided  by
us for environmental and toxic tort liabilities. No claim may  be  made unless the aggregate dollar
amount of all claims exceeds $500,000,  in  which case we are liable for claims only to the  extent such
aggregate amount exceeds $500,000.

We  will also indemnify GasLog Partners for liabilities related to:

(cid:127) certain defects in title to GasLog Partners’  initial fleet and any failure  to  obtain,  prior to the

time they were contributed to the Partnership, certain consents and permits  necessary  to  conduct
the Partnership’s business, which liabilities arise within three years after the closing of the
Partnership’s IPO; and

(cid:127) certain tax liabilities attributable to  the operation of the  assets contributed or sold to the

Partnership prior to the time they were contributed or  sold.

Restrictive Covenant Agreement

On April 4, 2012, Peter G. Livanos and Blenheim Holdings  entered into a Restrictive Covenant

Agreement with us, pursuant to which  Mr.  Livanos is prohibited from directly or indirectly owning,
operating or managing LNG vessels,  other than  pursuant to his involvement  with us. The restrictions
will terminate in the event that Mr. Livanos ceases to beneficially own at  least  20.0% of our issued and
outstanding share capital.

Notwithstanding these restrictions, Mr. Livanos  is permitted to engage in the following activities:

(cid:127) passive ownership (a) of minority interests in  any  business that  is not primarily  engaged in

owning,  operating or managing LNG vessels or  (b) constituting less than 5.0% of any publicly
listed company; and

(cid:127) non-passive participation in a business that  acquires an interest in  the ownership, operation  or

management of LNG vessels, provided  that as promptly as  reasonably practicable either (A) the
business enters into an agreement to dispose of such  competitive activity and such disposition is
completed within a reasonable time, or (B) Mr. Livanos’s participation  in such business is
changed so as to satisfy the exception for  passive ownership of minority interests in a business
that is not primarily engaged in a competitive activity.

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The restrictions described above do not apply to transactions  by independent fund managers not

acting under the direction or control  of Mr.  Livanos  or Blenheim Holdings.

As noted above, Mr. Livanos and Blenheim  Holdings are permitted under the terms of the
restrictive covenant agreement to dispose  of our common shares in the  following  circumstances:

(cid:127) pursuant to any transfer by Blenheim Holdings to its shareholders  (including any division of the

ownership interests in Blenheim Holdings of Mr.  Livanos), provided that the  transferee  or
transferees agree to be bound by the share  transfer  restrictions of  the restrictive covenant
agreement;

(cid:127) pursuant to any private sale to a strategic investor in  the Company, provided that the strategic

investor agrees to be bound by the share transfer  restrictions of the  restrictive covenant
agreement;

(cid:127) in connection with any sale or transfer that would  result in  a change in  control of the Company,

provided that such change in control has been  approved by our board of directors; and

(cid:127) in transactions relating to shares acquired following the effective  date of the restrictive covenant

agreement.

For purposes of the restrictive covenant  agreement, a ‘‘change  of  control’’ means Mr. Livanos and

Blenheim Holdings cease to beneficially own, in the aggregate,  at least 38.0%  of  the issued and
outstanding share capital of the Company. The share  transfer  restrictions  described above will
terminate as to any person that ceases to beneficially own, or does not beneficially own, at least 20.0%
of our issued and outstanding share capital.

Registration Rights Agreement

On April 4, 2012, we entered into a  registration rights  agreement with certain  of  our  shareholders,

pursuant to which we granted such shareholders and their transferees the  right, under  certain
circumstances and subject to certain restrictions, including restrictions included  in the lock-up
agreements to which they will be a party, to require us to register under the Securities Act of 1933, as
amended, our common shares held by  those persons. Under the registration  rights agreement, certain
of our shareholders and their transferees have  the right to request  us to register  the sale  of  shares held
by them on their behalf and may require  us to make  available  shelf registration statements permitting
sales of shares into the market from  time  to  time over  an extended period. While these demand
registration rights are subject to certain  timing and other restrictions, there is  no limit on the number
of times a shareholder may exercise such  rights. In  addition, those persons have  the ability to exercise
certain piggyback registration rights in connection with  registered  offerings initiated by us. In March
2014, in response to a Demand Registration Request (as defined in  the Registration  Rights
Agreement), the Company filed a Registration  Statement on  Form F-3 registering  the common shares
entitled to registration rights in addition  to other common  shares held by the  Company’s directors and
officers.

On June 22, 2020, we entered into a  registration rights agreement with certain of our shareholders,

pursuant to which we agreed to file and maintain a registration statement under the Securities Act  of
1933, as amended, with respect to the resale of the  common shares held by those persons. In July  2020,
the Company filed a Registration Statement on  Form F-3  registering  the common shares entitled to
registration rights.

Subscription Agreements

On January 16, 2014, we entered into subscription  agreements with  certain of our directors  and
officers for a concurrent private placement of 2,317,460 common shares at a price of $15.75 per share.

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On June 22, 2020, we entered into subscription agreements with certain  of  our  directors and
affiliates amongst others for a private  placement of  14,400,000  common shares  at a  price of $2.50 per
share. Approximately 75% of shares issued  in the Private Placement  were purchased by GasLog’s
directors and affiliates, including 6,500,000 common  shares purchased by  Blenheim Holdings  Ltd.,
wholly-owned by the Livanos family and 4,000,000 common shares purchased  by  a wholly-owned
affiliate of the Onassis Foundation.

Indemnification Agreements

We  have entered into indemnification agreements with our directors  and  officers which provide,
among other things, that we will indemnify our directors and officers, under  the circumstances and to
the extent provided for therein, for expenses, damages,  judgments, fines, settlements and fees that they
may be required to pay in actions or  proceedings to which they  are  or  may be made  a party by reason
of such person’s position as a director,  officer, employee  or other agent of  the Company, subject  to,
and to the maximum extent permitted  by,  applicable law.

Office  Space and Related Arrangements

Through our subsidiary GasLog LNG Services, we lease our office space in  Piraeus, Greece from

an entity controlled by Ceres Shipping, Nea Dimitra  Ktimatikh Kai Emporikh S.A. The lease
agreement is filed with the Greek authorities, and  has been  entered into on  market  rates.

GasLog LNG Services has also entered into  an agreement with Seres S.A.,  an entity controlled by

the Livanos family, for the latter to provide catering  services  to  the staff based in  our  Piraeus office.
Amounts paid pursuant to the agreement are generally  less  than A10 per person per day, but are
slightly higher on special occasions. In  addition, GasLog LNG Services has entered into an agreement
with Seres S.A. for the latter to provide  telephone and documentation services for  our  staff based in
Piraeus. Amounts paid pursuant to the agreement are  less  than A100,000 per year.

Egypt LNG

We  have a 25.0% ownership interest  in Egypt LNG, whose principal asset is  the LNG carrier
Methane Nile Eagle, which is currently operating under a  20-year time charter  with a subsidiary of  Shell.
Through our subsidiary GasLog LNG Services, we supervised the construction of the  Methane Nile
Eagle which was delivered from the shipyard  in 2007. Pursuant to a ship management  agreement
between GasLog LNG Services and Egypt LNG, the vessel has operated under  our technical
management since its delivery. From January  1, 2020 to December 31, 2020, we received a  total  of
approximately $0.7 million in revenues from Egypt LNG in respect of our vessel management  services.

Consulting Services Agreements

GasLog entered into a consulting agreement with Unisea Maritime Ltd. (‘‘Unisea’’), an  entity

controlled by the Livanos family, in consideration of the consulting services performed by Unisea in
respect of the sale  and leaseback transaction  for the Methane Julia Louise. Under the terms of the
consulting agreement, GasLog agreed to pay  a brokerage commission fee equal  to  0.25% of the agreed
charter rates under the sale and leaseback  transaction plus reasonable expenses (in line  with the
Company’s policies). The brokerage commission fee was paid in  advance  for the  full 20-year  period of
the bareboat charter, discounted to the date of the  agreement at an annual discount rate  of  7.5%.

GasLog entered into a consulting agreement for the services  of  an employee  of  Ceres

Monaco S.A.M., an entity controlled by  the Livanos family,  for consultancy services in  connection with
the acquisition of GasLog’s shareholding  in Gastrade and the ongoing work  on the development of the
Alexandroupolis FSRU project. GasLog agreed to pay  a fixed fee for work carried  out between May 1,

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2016 and December 31, 2017 in the sum  of  $100,000 and an ongoing consultancy arrangement fee of
$12,000 per month for a minimum of 12 days per month, which was terminated on December 31, 2020.

In December 2020, GasLog and GasLog  Partners reached agreement with  Ceres Shipping
Enterprises S.A. (‘‘Ceres Shipping Enterprises’’), an entity controlled by the  Livanos  family, to pay a
fee of US$1.0M to Ceres Shipping Enterprises  in consideration of the provision  of  services provided  by
employees of Ceres Shipping Enterprises in  support of the refinancing of all GasLog and GasLog
Partners  bank debt maturities due in 2021.  The US$1.0M  fee was  paid  60% by GasLog and  40% by
GasLog Partners.

In February 2021, GasLog agreed with Ceres Shipping Enterprises that if GasLog proceeds with

the refinancing of the 8.875% Senior Notes due 2022, Ceres Shipping Enterprises will receive a fee
equal to 10% of the total fees paid by the Company to investment banks in the refinancing process.
The fee payable to Ceres Shipping Enterprises will be in consideration of the provision of services
provided by employees of Ceres Shipping Enterprises in  support of the refinancing.

Exchange Agreement

On November 27, 2018, we entered into an agreement with GasLog Partners to modify the
partnership agreement with respect to the  IDRs. The modification reduced the distributions of cash
upon liquidation and the general partner’s IDRs  on quarterly distributions above  $0.5625 per unit from
48% to 23%. We further agreed to waive  IDR payments resulting from any  asset or business acquired
by GasLog Partners from a third party.  In exchange for  these modifications,  we entered  into  an
agreement among GasLog Partners and GasLog  Partners  GP LLC under which  we received
$25.0 million from GasLog Partners.

Amendment of the Partnership Agreement

On June 24, 2019, we entered into an agreement  with GasLog  Partners  to  amend the  Partnership

Agreement to eliminate the IDRs in  exchange for the issuance by the Partnership to GasLog  of
2,532,911 common units and 2,490,000 Class B units (of which 415,000 are  Class  B-1  units, 415,000 are
Class B-2 units, 415,000 are Class B-3 units,  415,000 are Class B-4 units, 415,000  are Class B-5 units
and 415,000 are Class B-6 units), issued  on June 30,  2019. Class B units have all of the rights  and
obligations attached to the common units,  except for voting rights and participation in distributions
until such time as GasLog exercises its  right  to  convert the Class  B units  to  common units. The Class B
units will become eligible for conversion on a  one-for-one  basis into common units at  GasLog’s  option
on July 1, 2020, July 1, 2021, July 1, 2022,  July 1,  2023, July 1, 2024  and  July 1,  2025 for  the Class B-1
units, Class B-2 units, Class B-3 units,  Class B-4 units, Class B-5 units and the  Class B-6 units,
respectively. Following the IDR elimination,  the allocation of  GasLog’s  profit to non-controlling
interests is based on the revised distribution policy for  available cash  stated  in the Partnership
Agreement as amended, effective June 30,  2019, and under  which 98.0% of  the available cash  is
distributed to the common unitholders  and 2.0%  is distributed to the general partner.

Merger Agreement

On February 22, 2021, we announced  that GasLog had entered into a Merger Agreement with
GEPIF. Under the Merger Agreement, GEPIF will acquire  all of the outstanding  common shares of
GasLog that are not held by the Rolling Shareholders  of GasLog  in exchange  for $5.80 in cash per
common share (the ‘‘Merger Consideration’’). Immediately following the completion of  the Transaction,
the Rolling Shareholders will continue  to  hold approximately 55%  of  the outstanding common  shares of
GasLog and GEPIF will hold approximately  45%. Promptly after completion of the  Transaction,  the
common shares of GasLog will be delisted from the NYSE.

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The Transaction is expected to close  in  the second quarter of 2021,  subject to approval of  the
Transaction by GasLog shareholders at  a  special meeting, including by a majority  of the shares  held by
the non-Rolling Shareholders present  at the shareholders meeting that  will be held in connection with
the Transaction, and the satisfaction  or  waiver of certain customary  closing conditions. GasLog’s
preference shares shall remain outstanding and continue to trade on the NYSE immediately following
the completion of the Transaction.

In connection with the Transaction we entered into a Rolling  Shareholders Agreement (the

‘‘Rollover Agreement’’) with the Rolling  Shareholders which include Blenheim Holdings, which  is
wholly owned by the Livanos family,  and  a wholly  owned affiliate of the Onassis Foundation. Under the
terms of the Rollover Agreement the Rolling Shareholders waive any claim to receive  the Merger
Consideration for the Rollover Shares as  defined in the  Rollover Agreement.

Other Related Party Transactions

For a  description of additional related party transactions,  see Note 21 to our consolidated financial

statements included elsewhere in this annual report.

Procedures for Review and Approval of  Related Party  Transactions

Related party transactions, which means transactions  in which  the Company or one  of  its

subsidiaries is a participant and any of the Company’s  directors, executive officers  or significant
shareholders, or any members of their  immediate  families or  entities controlled by them,  have a direct
or indirect interest, will be subject to review and approval or ratification by our  audit and risk
committee in accordance with the Related Party Transaction  Policy adopted  by  such committee.

C. Interests of Experts and Counsel

Not applicable.

ITEM 8. FINANCIAL INFORMATION

A. Consolidated Statements and Other Financial Information

See ‘‘Item 18. Financial Statements’’  below.

Legal Proceedings

We  have not been involved in any legal proceedings that we believe may have  a significant  effect

on our business, financial position, results of operations  or liquidity, and we  are not aware of any
proceedings that are pending or threatened  that may have a material  effect on  our  business,  financial
position, results of operations or liquidity. From time to time,  we  may  be  subject to legal proceedings
and claims in the ordinary course of business, principally  property  damage, personal injury claims  and
commercial disputes. We expect that these claims would  be  covered by insurance,  subject to customary
deductibles. However, those claims, even if lacking merit,  could result in the  expenditure of significant
financial and managerial resources.

Preference Shares Dividend Requirements

Dividends on Preference Shares are  payable  quarterly on each of January  1, April  1, July  1 and

October 1, or the next succeeding business day, as and if declared by our board of directors  out of
legally available funds for such purpose.  The dividend rate for  the Preference Shares is 8.75% per
annum per $25.00 of liquidation preference  per  share (equal to $2.18750 per  annum per share). The
dividend rates are not subject to adjustment. We paid dividends to holders of our Preference  Shares  of

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$0.546875 per share on, January 2, 2020, April 1, 2020,  July 1, 2020, October  1, 2020 and January 4,
2021. Our Preference Shares dividend payment obligations impact our  future liquidity needs.

Common Shares Dividend Policy

We  paid our first cash dividend since  becoming a public company in March  2012 on  December 17,
2012 in an amount of $0.11 per share.  We have  subsequently paid dividends to holders  of  our  common
shares as follows:

Date

March 25, 2013 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
June 11, 2013 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
September 13, 2013 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
December 9, 2013 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
March 25, 2014 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
June 11, 2014 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
September 8, 2014 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
December 5, 2014 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
March 13, 2015 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
May 21, 2015 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
August  20, 2015 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
November 19, 2015 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
March 17, 2016 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
May 26, 2016 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
August  25, 2016 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
November 24, 2016 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
March 16, 2017 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
May 25, 2017 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
August  24, 2017 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
November 22, 2017 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
March 15, 2018 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
May 24, 2018 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
August  23, 2018 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
November 21, 2018 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
December 17, 2018 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
March 14, 2019 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
May 23, 2019 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
August  22, 2019 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
November 21, 2019 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
December 31, 2019 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
March 12, 2020 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
May 28, 2020 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
August  27, 2020 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
November 30, 2020 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Dividend
per Share

$0.11
$0.11
$0.11
$0.12
$0.12
$0.12
$0.12
$0.14
$0.14
$0.14
$0.14
$0.14
$0.14
$0.14
$0.14
$0.14
$0.14
$0.14
$0.14
$0.14
$0.14
$0.15
$0.15
$0.15
$0.40
$0.15
$0.15
$0.15
$0.15
$0.38
$0.15
$0.05
$0.05
$0.05

As our fleet expands, we will evaluate changes to the quarterly  dividend consistent  with our cash

flow and liquidity position. Our policy  is to pay dividends  in  amounts that  will  allow  us  to  retain
sufficient liquidity to fund our obligations  as well as execute our business plan going forward.  The
declaration and payment of any dividend  is subject to the discretion  of  our  board of  directors and the
requirements of Bermuda law. In addition,  certain of our credit facilities impose  limitations on our
ability to pay dividends. Our board of directors will determine the timing  and amount of  all  dividend

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payments based on various factors, including our earnings, financial condition, cash requirements  and
availability, restrictions in our credit facilities and  the provisions of Bermuda law.  Accordingly, we
cannot guarantee that we will be able  to  pay quarterly dividends.  See ‘‘Item  3. Key  Information—
D. Risk Factors—Risks Related to Our  Business’’ for a discussion  of  risks related to our ability to pay
dividends.

Set out below is a table showing the dividends  declared  on our common shares in 2016, 2017,

2018, 2019 and 2020 and on our Preference  Shares in 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019  and 2020.

Year ended December 31,

2016

2017

2018

2019

2020

Total

(Expressed in millions of U.S. dollars)

Common share dividend declared . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $45.1 $45.1 $80.0 $79.2 $25.6 $275.0
Preference share dividend declared . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $10.1 $10.1 $10.1 $10.1 $10.1 $ 50.5

B. Significant Changes

See ‘‘Item 18. Financial Statements—Note 30.  Subsequent Events’’ below.

ITEM 9. THE OFFER AND LISTING

Trading on the NYSE

Since our IPO in the United States in 2012, our common shares have been listed  on the  NYSE

under the symbol ‘‘GLOG’’.

Our Preference Shares have been trading on the NYSE under the symbol ‘‘GLOG PR A’’  since

March 31, 2015.

ITEM 10. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

A. Share  Capital

Our authorized share capital consists of 500,000,000 shares,  par value $0.01  per  share. As  of
December 31, 2020, the share capital  consisted of 95,393,126 issued and outstanding  common shares,
par value $0.01 per share, 216,683 treasury shares  and 4,600,000 issued  and  outstanding Preference
Shares.

Pursuant to our bye-laws, subject to any resolution of the  shareholders to the contrary, our board

of directors is authorized to issue any of our  authorized but unissued common shares. There  are no
limitations on the right of non-Bermudians or non-residents of  Bermuda  to  hold  or vote our  shares.

B. Memorandum of Association

We  are an exempted company incorporated under the laws of Bermuda. We are  registered with
the Registrar of Companies in Bermuda  under registration number 33928. We were incorporated on
July 16, 2003 under the name Gaslog  Ltd.  We  effected  a change of name from ‘‘Gaslog  Ltd.’’  to
‘‘GasLog Ltd.’’ on  August 23, 2011 in  compliance with the Companies Act. Our  registered office is
located at Clarendon House, 2 Church  Street, Hamilton, HM  11, Bermuda.

The objects of our business are unrestricted, and the Company  has the  capacity of a natural

person. We can therefore undertake activities without restriction on our capacity.

Common Shares

Holders of our common shares have  no pre-emptive,  redemption, conversion or sinking fund
rights. Holders of our common shares  are  entitled  to  one vote per share  on all matters submitted to a

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vote of holders of common shares. Unless  a different majority  is required by law or by our bye-laws,
resolutions to be approved by holders  of  our  common shares require approval by a simple majority  of
votes cast at a meeting at which a quorum  is present.

In the event of our liquidation, dissolution  or winding  up, the holders of  our  common shares are

entitled to share equally and ratably  in our assets, if any, remaining after  the  payment of all of our
debts and liabilities, subject to any liquidation preference  on any issued and outstanding preference
shares.

Preference Shares

Pursuant to Bermuda law and our bye-laws, our board of directors by resolution may establish  one
or more series of preference shares having such number  of  shares, designations,  dividend rates, relative
voting rights, conversion or exchange  rights,  redemption rights,  liquidation rights  and other  relative
participation, optional or other special  rights, qualifications, limitations or  restrictions as  may be fixed
by the board without any further shareholder approval. Of the Company’s  500 million authorised
shares, 4.6 million have been designated  8.75% Series A Cumulative Redeemable Perpetual Preference
Shares.

Dividend Rights

Under Bermuda law, a company may  not declare  or pay dividends if there are reasonable grounds
for believing that: (i) the company is,  or  would after the payment  be,  unable to pay its liabilities as  they
become  due; or (ii) the realizable value  of its assets would thereby be less than its liabilities. Under our
bye-laws, each common share is entitled to dividends if, as and  when dividends are declared  by  our
board of directors.

Any cash dividends payable to holders of our common shares listed on the  NYSE will be paid to

American Stock Transfer & Trust Company, LLC, our transfer agent in  the United  States  for
disbursement to those holders.

Variation of Rights

If at any time we have more than one  class of shares, the rights attaching to any class, unless
otherwise provided for by the terms  of  issue of  the relevant  class,  may  be  varied with the  sanction of a
resolution passed by a majority of the issued shares  of  such class.  Our bye-laws specify that the  creation
or issue of shares ranking equally with existing shares  will not, unless expressly provided by the terms
of issue of existing shares, vary the rights  attached to existing  shares.

Transfer of Shares

Our board of directors may in its absolute  discretion and without assigning any  reason refuse  to

register the transfer of a share that is not fully  paid. Our board of directors may  also refuse to
recognize an instrument of transfer of a  share unless it  is accompanied by the relevant share certificate
and such other evidence of the transferor’s right  to  make  the transfer as our board of directors shall
reasonably require. In addition, our board  of  directors  may  refuse to register the transfer of  a share
unless all applicable consents, authorizations and permissions of any governmental  body or  agency in
Bermuda have been obtained. Subject  to  these restrictions, a holder of common  shares may transfer the
title to all or any of his common shares  by completing  a form of  transfer  in the form set out in our
bye-laws (or as near thereto as circumstances admit) or  in such other common form as the  board may
accept. The instrument of transfer must  be signed by the  transferor  and transferee,  although in the  case
of a fully paid share our board of directors may  accept the instrument  signed only by the transferor.

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Meetings of Shareholders

We  are required to convene at least one general  meeting of shareholders  each  calendar  year.

Bermuda law provides that a special general  meeting of shareholders  may  be  called by the board of
directors of a company and must be called upon the request  of  shareholders holding not less than
10.0% of the paid-up capital of the company  carrying the right to vote  at  general meetings.  Bermuda
law also requires that shareholders be given at least five days’  advance  notice of  a general  meeting, but
an unintentional failure notice to any person does  not  invalidate  the proceedings  at a meeting.  Our
bye-laws provide that the Chairman or  our board of directors may convene an annual  general meeting
or a special general meeting. Under  our bye-laws,  at least 10  days’ notice of an annual general  meeting
or a special general meeting must be  given to each shareholder entitled to vote at such meeting.  This
notice requirement is subject to the ability  to  hold  such meetings on shorter notice  if  such notice is
agreed: (i) in the case of an annual general meeting,  by  all  of the shareholders  entitled to attend and
vote at such meeting; or (ii) in the case of a special  general  meeting, by a majority in number  of  the
shareholders entitled to attend and vote at the meeting  holding  not  less than 95.0% in nominal  value of
the shares entitled to vote at such meeting.  The  quorum required  for a  general meeting  of  shareholders
is one or more persons present in person  throughout the meeting and representing in  person or by
proxy in excess of 50.0% of all issued and outstanding  common shares. General meetings  can be
convened at a location in or outside of Bermuda.  Our bye-laws provide  that  our board of directors
may, but is not required to, make arrangements permitting shareholders to participate in  general
meetings by such telephonic, electronic or  other communications facilities  or means as  permit  all
persons participating in the meeting to  communicate  with each  other simultaneously and
instantaneously.

Access to Books and Records and Dissemination of  Information

Members of the general public have  a right  to  inspect  public documents of the Company available

at the office of the Registrar of Companies  in Bermuda. These documents include  the Company’s
memorandum of association, including its  objects and powers, and  certain alterations to the
memorandum of association. Our shareholders have the  additional right  to  inspect the bye-laws of the
Company, minutes of general meetings and the Company’s audited financial statements, which must be
presented to the annual general meeting.  The Company’s register of  members is also open to
inspection by shareholders and by members of  the general  public without charge. The register of
members is required under Bermuda law to be open for inspection for not less than  two hours in any
business day (subject to the ability of a company to close the  register of members for not more than
thirty days in a year). The Company  is required to maintain  its  share register in  Bermuda but may,
subject to the provisions of the Companies Act, establish a branch register outside of Bermuda. The
Company is required to keep at its registered office a register  of directors  and officers  that  is open  for
inspection for not less than two hours in  any business  day by members of the public without charge.
Bermuda law does not, however, provide  a general right  for  shareholders to inspect or  obtain  copies  of
any other corporate records.

Election and Removal of Directors

Our bye-laws provide that our board shall consist of no  less  than three directors and no more than

fifteen directors, as the board of directors  may from time to time determine. Our board of directors
consists of nine directors.

Any shareholder wishing to propose  for election as a director someone who  is not an existing
director or is not proposed by our board must give  notice  of  the intention to propose the person for
election. Where a director is to be elected  at an  annual  general meeting,  that  notice  must  be  given not
less  than 90 days nor more than 120 days before the anniversary of the last  annual general meeting
prior to the giving of the notice or, in  the event the  annual  general meeting  is called for a date that is

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not 30 days before or after such anniversary, the notice must be given not later than  10 days following
the earlier of the date on which notice  of the annual general meeting was posted to shareholders or  the
date  on which public disclosure of the date  of the annual general meeting was made. Where a  director
is to be elected at a special general meeting  that  notice  must  be  given not later  than 10  days following
the earlier of the date on which notice  of the special  general  meeting was posted to shareholders or the
date  on which public disclosure of the date  of the special  general  meeting was made.

A director may be removed by the shareholders,  provided notice of the  shareholders’ meeting
convened to remove the director is given  to the director. The notice must contain a statement of  the
intention to remove the director and must  be  served on the  director  not less than 14 days before  the
meeting.  The director is entitled to attend  the meeting and be heard on the motion for  his or her
removal.

Holders of our Preference Shares generally have  no voting rights  except (i)  in respect of
amendments to the memorandum of  association which would adversely  vary  the rights of the
Preference Shares, (ii) in the event that  the  Company proposes to issue  any parity  shares if the
cumulative dividends payable on issued  and outstanding Preference  Shares are in  arrears or any senior
shares or (iii) in the event of a proposed  amalgamation or  merger  of the Company.  However, if and
whenever dividends payable on the Preference Shares  are in arrears for six or more quarterly  periods,
whether or not consecutive, holders of Preference Shares (voting together as  a class  with all other
classes or series of parity securities upon  which like voting rights  have been conferred  and are
exercisable) will be entitled to elect one additional  director to serve  on  our board of directors, and the
size of our board of directors will be  increased as needed to accommodate such change (unless  the size
of our board of directors already has  been  increased by reason of  the  election of a director by holders
of parity securities upon which like voting  rights have been  conferred and with which the Preference
Shares voted  as a class for the election of such  director). The right  of such holders of  Preference
Shares to elect a member of our board  of  directors will continue until  such time as all accumulated and
unpaid  dividends on the Preference Shares  have been paid in full.

Proceedings of Board of Directors

Our bye-laws provide that our business is to be managed and conducted by our board  of  directors.
There is  no requirement in our bye-laws  or Bermuda law that directors hold any of our shares. There is
also no requirement in our bye-laws  or Bermuda  law  that our directors  must  retire  at a certain  age.

The remuneration of our directors is determined by the board  of directors, and  there is no
requirement that a specified number  or  percentage  of ‘‘independent’’  directors must approve any such
determination. Our directors may also  be  paid all travel, hotel  and other expenses  properly incurred by
them in connection with our business or  their duties  as directors.

Director Conflicts of Interest

Any conflict of interest question involving one or more of the Company’s  directors will be resolved

by the audit and risk committee of the  board of  directors.

In the event that a director has a direct  or indirect interest  in any  contract  or arrangement with

the Company, provided that the director  discloses such  interest as required  by  Bermuda law, such
director is entitled under our bye-laws  to  vote  in respect  of  any such contract  or arrangement in which
he or she is interested unless he or she  is  disqualified from  voting by the Chairman of our board of
directors. In the event that the Chairman  has  disclosed a direct or indirect interest in a  contract or
arrangement with us, the determination as to whether the Chairman and  any other interested director
should be disqualified from voting will be made  by  a majority of the  disinterested directors.

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Bermuda law prohibits any director (including  the spouse or  children of the director or any
company of which such director, spouse or children own or control more than 20.0% of the  capital or
loan debt) from borrowing from us (except loans made to directors who are  bona fide employees or
former employees  pursuant to an employees’ share scheme) unless  shareholders holding 90.0% of  the
total voting rights have consented to the  loan.

Indemnification of Directors and Officers

Section 98 of the Companies Act provides generally that a Bermuda company  may indemnify  its
directors, officers and auditors against  any  liability  which by virtue  of  any rule of  law would otherwise
be imposed on them in respect of any negligence,  default, breach of duty or breach of trust,  except in
cases where such liability arises from  fraud or dishonesty  of  which such director,  officer  or auditor  may
be guilty in relation to the company. Section  98 further provides that a  Bermuda company may
indemnify its  directors, officers and auditors against any liability incurred  by them in defending any
proceedings, whether civil or criminal, in  which judgment  is awarded in  their favor  or in which  they are
acquitted or granted relief by the Supreme Court  of Bermuda pursuant to section 281 of the
Companies Act.

We  have adopted provisions in our bye-laws that provide that we shall indemnify  our officers  and
directors in respect of their actions and omissions, except in respect of  their  fraud or dishonesty. Our
bye-laws provide that the shareholders waive  all claims  or rights of  action that they might have,
individually or in right of the Company, against any of the Company’s directors  or officers for any  act
or failure to act in the performance of  such  director’s or  officer’s duties, except in  respect of any fraud
or dishonesty of such director or officer.  Section 98A  of  the Companies Act  permits  us to purchase and
maintain insurance for the benefit of  any  officer or director in  respect of any loss  or liability attaching
to him in respect of any negligence, default, breach of duty or breach of trust,  whether or not we  may
otherwise indemnify such officer or director. We  have purchased and maintain directors’ and officers’
liability insurance for such purpose. We have  also entered into indemnification  agreements with  our
directors and officers. See ‘‘Item 7. Major  Shareholders and Related Party Transactions—B.  Related
Party Transactions’’.

Amendment of Memorandum of Association and Bye-laws

Bermuda law provides that the memorandum of  association of  a  company may be amended by a
resolution passed at a general meeting  of  shareholders. Our  bye-laws provide that no  bye-law shall  be
rescinded, altered or amended, and no  new  bye-law  shall  be made, unless it  shall have been  approved
by a resolution of our board of directors and by  a resolution of our shareholders  including the
affirmative votes of at least a majority of all  issued  and  outstanding shares.

Under Bermuda law, the holders of an aggregate of not less  than 20.0% in par  value of a
company’s issued share capital or any  class  thereof have the  right to apply  to  the Supreme Court of
Bermuda for an annulment of any amendment of the memorandum of association adopted by
shareholders at any general meeting,  other  than  an amendment which  alters or  reduces a  company’s
share capital as provided in the Companies Act. Where such an application is made, the amendment
becomes effective only to the extent that  it is confirmed by the Bermuda court. An application for an
annulment of an amendment of the memorandum of association must be made  within twenty-one days
after the date on which the resolution  altering the  company’s memorandum of association is passed and
may be made on behalf of persons entitled  to  make the application by  one or more  of  their  number as
they may appoint in writing for the purpose.  No  application  may be made by shareholders voting in
favor of the amendment.

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Amalgamations, Mergers and Business Combinations

The amalgamation or merger of a Bermuda company  with another company  or corporation (other

than certain affiliated companies) requires  the amalgamation or merger agreement to be approved  by
the company’s board of directors and by its shareholders. Unless the company’s  bye-laws provide
otherwise, the approval of 75.0% of the  shareholders  voting at such meeting is required  to  approve the
amalgamation or merger agreement, and  the quorum for such meeting  must  be  two persons holding or
representing more  than one-third of the  issued  shares of  the company. Our bye-laws  provide that a
merger or an amalgamation must only be approved by the  affirmative votes of a majority  of  the votes
attaching to all issued and outstanding shares entitling  the shareholder to vote on such resolutions.

Under Bermuda law, in the event of an amalgamation or  merger of a Bermuda company  with
another company or corporation, a shareholder of the Bermuda company  who did not vote in  favor of
the amalgamation or merger and who is  not  satisfied that fair  value has been offered for such
shareholder’s shares may, within one  month of notice of  the shareholders’ meeting,  apply to the
Supreme Court of Bermuda to appraise the fair value  of  those shares.

Shareholder Suits

Class actions and derivative actions are  generally  not available to shareholders under Bermuda law.

The Bermuda courts, however, would ordinarily be expected to permit  a shareholder to commence  an
action in the name of a company to remedy a  wrong  to  the company where the act complained of is
alleged to be beyond the corporate power of the company or  illegal, or would  result in  the violation of
the company’s memorandum of association or  bye-laws. Furthermore, consideration would be given  by
a Bermuda court to acts that are alleged  to  constitute a fraud against the minority shareholders or, for
instance, where an act requires the approval  of a greater percentage of the company’s shareholders
than that which actually approved it.

When the affairs of a company are being conducted in  a manner  that is oppressive or  prejudicial

to the interests of some part of the shareholders, one or more  shareholders  may apply  to  the Supreme
Court of Bermuda, which may make  such  order as it  sees fit,  including an  order  regulating the conduct
of the company’s affairs in the future or ordering the  purchase  of  the shares of any  shareholders by
other shareholders or by the company.

Our bye-laws contain a provision which provides  that in the event  any dispute arises concerning

the Companies Act or out of our bye-laws, including  whether there has been a  breach  of  the
Companies Act or our bye-laws by an  officer or director, any such dispute shall be subject to the
exclusive jurisdiction of the Supreme  Court of Bermuda. In addition, our  bye-laws  contain a provision
by virtue of which our shareholders waive  any claim or right  of  action that they have, both individually
and on our behalf, against any director  or officer in  relation  to  any  action  or failure to take action by
such director or officer, except in respect of any fraud  or dishonesty of such director  or officer.

Capitalization of Profits and Reserves

Pursuant to our bye-laws, our board  of  directors  may  (i) capitalize  any part of the  amount  of our

share premium or  other reserve accounts  or any amount  credited  to  our profit and  loss account  or
otherwise available for distribution by applying such sum in paying up  unissued shares to be allotted as
fully paid bonus shares pro rata (except  in connection with  the conversion of shares) to the
shareholders; or (ii) capitalize any sum  standing  to  the credit  of a reserve account or sums otherwise
available for dividend or distribution by paying up  in full, partly  paid  or  nil paid shares of those
shareholders who would have been entitled to such  sums if they  were distributed by way of dividend or
distribution.

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Calls on Shares and Forfeiture

In the event of any issuance by the Company of shares  that  are  not fully paid, our board of
directors may make such calls as it thinks fit upon the  holders of such partly  paid shares in respect of
any amounts unpaid on such shares (and  not made  payable at fixed times  by  the terms and conditions
of issue). If a call on partly paid shares is not paid  on or  before the day appointed for  payment thereof,
the holder of such shares may at the  discretion  of our board of directors  be  liable to pay the  Company
interest on the amount of such call and  our board of directors may  direct the secretary of the  Company
to forward such shareholder a notice in writing demanding payment. If the  requirements of such notice
are not complied with, any such share may  at any time  thereafter, until the  payment of all amounts
due, be forfeited by a resolution of our board of directors to that effect, and such share shall thereupon
become  the property of the Company and may  be  disposed of as  our board of  directors shall
determine.

Untraced Shareholders

Our bye-laws provide that our board of directors may forfeit  any  dividend or other  monies payable

in respect of any shares that remain unclaimed for  six years from  the  date when such monies became
due for payment. In addition, we are entitled to cease sending  dividend  warrants and checks by post or
otherwise to a shareholder if such instruments have been returned undelivered  to,  or left  uncashed by,
such shareholder on at least two consecutive occasions  or, following one such occasion, reasonable
enquires have failed to establish the shareholder’s new address. This  entitlement ceases  if  the
shareholder claims a dividend or cashes  a  dividend check or  a  warrant.

Certain Provisions of Bermuda Law

We  have been designated by the Bermuda  Monetary Authority as a non-resident  for Bermuda
exchange control purposes. This designation allows us to engage in transactions  in currencies other than
the Bermuda dollar, and there are no exchange control  restrictions on our ability to transfer funds
(other than funds denominated in Bermuda dollars) in  and  out of Bermuda or to pay  dividends  to  U.S.
residents who are holders of our common  shares or our Preference Shares.

The Bermuda Monetary Authority has given its consent for the issue and free transferability of all
our  common shares to and between non-residents  of  Bermuda  for exchange control purposes, provided
that our shares remain listed on an appointed  stock exchange, which includes the NYSE. Approvals or
permissions given by the Bermuda Monetary Authority do not constitute a guarantee  by  the Bermuda
Monetary Authority as to our performance or our creditworthiness.  Accordingly, in giving such consent
or permissions, the Bermuda Monetary  Authority shall not be liable  for the financial soundness,
performance or default of our business or  for  the correctness of any opinions or  statements expressed
in this annual report. Certain issues and transfers of common  shares involving persons deemed resident
in Bermuda for exchange control purposes require  the specific consent  of  the Bermuda Monetary
Authority.

In accordance with Bermuda law, share  certificates are only issued in  the names of companies,

partnerships or individuals. In the case of  a shareholder acting in  a special  capacity (for example as a
trustee), certificates may, at the request of the  shareholder, record the  capacity in which  the
shareholder is acting. Notwithstanding  such recording  of  any special capacity, we are not bound to
investigate or see to the execution of any  such trust.  We  will  take  no notice of any trust applicable to
any of our shares, whether or not we  have been notified of such  trust.

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C. Material Contracts

The following is a summary of each material contract, other than contracts entered into in  the
ordinary course of business, to which  we  or any of our subsidiaries  is a party. Such  summaries are not
intended to be complete and reference is made to the contracts themselves, which are exhibits to this
annual report.

(a) Registration Rights Agreement among GasLog  Ltd.  and the shareholders named therein,
dated as of April 4, 2012; please see ‘‘Item 7. Major Shareholders and  Related  Party
Transactions—B. Related Party Transactions—Registration Rights Agreement’’.

(b) Appendix to the Private Agreement of Professional  Hiring (English translation), dated

December 1, 2010 and October 1, 2011, between  Nea  Dimitra Ktimatikh Kai Emporikh S.A.
and GasLog LNG Services Ltd.; please see  ‘‘Item 7. Major Shareholders and Related Party
Transactions—B. Related Party Transactions—Office Space and  Related Arrangements’’.

(c) Form of Indemnification Agreement for the Company’s directors  and  certain  officers; please

see ‘‘Item 7. Major Shareholders and Related Party  Transactions—B. Related Party
Transactions—Indemnification Agreements’’.

(d) Restrictive Covenant Agreement  among  GasLog Ltd., Peter  G. Livanos and Blenheim

Holdings Ltd., dated April 4, 2012; please  see ‘‘Item 7.  Major Shareholders and Related Party
Transactions—B. Related Party Transactions—Restrictive Covenant  Agreement’’.

(e) GasLog Ltd. 2013 Omnibus Incentive  Compensation Plan;  please see ‘‘Item  6. Directors,

Senior Management and Employees—B.  Compensation  of Directors and Senior
Management—Equity Compensation Plans’’.

(f) Facilities Agreement for $1,311,356,340 Loan Facilities dated October 16, 2015  between
GAS-eleven Ltd., GAS-twelve Ltd., GAS-thirteen  Ltd.,  GAS-fourteen Ltd.,  GAS-twenty
two Ltd., GAS-twenty three Ltd., GAS-twenty four Ltd.,  GAS-twenty five Ltd.,  as borrowers,
Citibank, N.A., London Branch, Nordea Bank  AB, London  Branch, The Export-Import Bank
of Korea, Bank of America, National Association, BNP Paribas,  Credit Agricole  Corporate
and Investment Bank, Credit Suisse AG, HSBC Bank plc, ING  Bank N.V.,  London Branch,
KEB Hana Bank, London Branch, KfW IPEX-Bank GmbH, National  Australia  Bank Limited,
Oversea-Chinese Banking Corporation Limited, Societe Generale  and  The  Korea
Development Bank as mandated lead  arrangers with Nordea  Bank AB, London  Branch  as
agent, security agent, global co-ordinator and bookrunner and Citibank N.A.,  London Branch
as export credit agent, global co-ordinator, bookrunner and  export credit  agent co-ordinator,
guaranteed by GasLog Ltd. and GasLog Carriers  Ltd.; please see ‘‘Item 5. Operating and
Financial Review and Prospects—B. Liquidity  and Capital  Resources—Credit Facilities’’.

(g) Senior Facility Agreement dated February 18, 2016,  relating to a $396,500,000 loan facility

among GAS-eighteen Ltd., GAS-nineteen  Ltd.,  GAS-twenty Ltd., GAS-twenty one  Ltd.  and
GAS-twenty seven Ltd. as borrowers, ABN AMRO  Bank N.V. and DNB  (UK) Ltd. as
mandated lead arrangers, original lenders  and bookrunners,  DVB Bank America N.V as
mandated lead arranger and original  lender, Commonwealth Bank  of Australia, ING
Bank N.V., London Branch, Credit Agricole  Corporate  and Investment Bank, National
Australia Bank Limited as original lenders and  DNB Bank  ASA,  London Branch  as agent and
security agent; please see ‘‘Item 5. Operating and Financial Review  and Prospects—B.
Liquidity and Capital Resources—Credit Facilities’’.

(h) Form of Corporate Guarantee between GasLog Ltd. and  DNB  Bank ASA,  London  Branch
(provided in respect of the Senior Facility Agreement, dated February  18, 2016);  please see

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‘‘Item 5. Operating and Financial Review and Prospects—B.  Liquidity and Capital
Resources—Credit Facilities’’.

(i) Form of Corporate Guarantee between GasLog Partners LP and DNB Bank ASA, London
Branch (provided in respect of the Senior Facility Agreement, dated February  18, 2016);
please see ‘‘Item 5. Operating and Financial Review and Prospects—B. Liquidity and Capital
Resources—Credit Facilities’’.

(j) Facilities Agreement dated July  19, 2016, relating  to  $1,050,000,000 Term Loan and Revolving

Credit Facilities among GAS-one Ltd., GAS-two Ltd., GAS-six Ltd., GAS-seven Ltd.,
GAS-eight Ltd., GAS-nine Ltd., GAS-ten  Ltd.  and  GAS-fifteen Ltd. as borrowers, Citigroup
Global  Market Limited, Credit Suisse AG, Nordea Bank AB, London Branch,  Skandinaviska
Enskilda Banken AB (publ), HSBC Bank plc, ING Bank N.V., London  Branch,  Danmarks
Skibskredit A/S and The Korea Development  Bank as mandated lead arrangers and DVB
Bank America N.V. as arranger with  Nordea Bank AB,  London Branch  as agent and security
agent; please see ‘‘Item 5. Operating and Financial Review and Prospects—B. Liquidity and
Capital Resources—Credit Facilities’’.

(k) Facilities Agreement dated February 20,  2019, relating  to  $450,000,000 Revolving Credit

Facility among GAS-three Ltd., GAS-four Ltd., GAS-five  Ltd., Gas-sixteen Ltd.,
GAS-seventeen Ltd., as borrowers, Credit Suisse AG, Nordea Bank  Abp, Filial  I Norge, The
IyoBank, Ltd. Singapore Branch as the Original Lenders with Nordea Bank Abp, Filial I
Norge as agent and the security agent, and Credit  Suisse  AG  as mandated  lead  arranger,
global co-ordinator and bookrunner, guaranteed  by  GasLog Partners LP and GasLog Partners
Holdings LLC.; please see ‘‘Item 5. Operating and Financial Review and Prospects—B.
Liquidity and Capital Resources—Credit Facilities’’.

(l) Exchange Agreement among GasLog  Partners  LP, GasLog  Partners  GP  LLC and GasLog  Ltd.
dated June 24, 2019; please see ‘‘Item 7.  Major  Shareholders and Related  Party Transactions—
B. Related Party Transactions—Exchange Agreement’’.

(m) Facility Agreement dated June 25,  2019, relating  to  $130,000,000 Term Loan Facility among
GasLog Hellas-1 Special Maritime Enterprise as Borrower, ABN Amro  Bank N.V. and
Oversea-Chinese Banking Corporation Limited as mandated lead arrangers and ABN Amro
Bank N.V. as agent and the security agent; please see ‘‘Item  5. Operating and Financial
Review and Prospects—B. Liquidity and Capital Resources—Credit Facilities’’.

(o) Form of Corporate Guarantee between GasLog Ltd.  and  ABN  Amro Bank  N.V. (provided in

respect of the GasLog Warsaw Facility, dated June 25,  2019); please  see ‘‘Item  5. Operating
and Financial Review and Prospects—B.  Liquidity  and  Capital Resources—Credit Facilities’’.

(p) Facility Agreement dated December 12, 2019,  relating  to  $1,052,791,260 Loan Facilities  among
GAS-twenty eight Ltd.; GAS-thirty Ltd.,  GAS-thirty  one Ltd., GAS-thirty two Ltd., GAS-thirty
three Ltd., GAS-thirty four Ltd., and GAS-thirty five Ltd., as borrowers, Citibank,  N.A.
London Branch, DNB (UK) Ltd., Skandinaviska  Enskilda Banken AB (publ),  Bank of
America National Association, Commonwealth  Bank  of  Australia, KfW IPEX-Bank  GmbH,
National Australia Bank Limited, Oversea-Chinese Banking Corporation Limited, Societe
Generale, London Branch, Standard Chartered Bank, BNP  Paribas  Seoul  Branch  and The
Korea Development Bank as Mandated Lead Arrangers;  Citibank, N.A. London Branch, DNB
(UK) Ltd., Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken AB (publ), KfW IPEX-Bank GmbH, National
Australia Bank Limited, Oversea-Chinese Banking Corporation Limited,  Societe  Generale,
London Branch, Standard Chartered Bank, BNP  Paribas  Seoul Branch and The Korea
Development Bank as bookrunners; DNB Bank ASA, London Branch as  Agent and  security
agent; Citibank N.A., London Branch as  ECA  Agent and ECA Co-ordinator; Citibank  N.A.

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London Branch and DNB (UK) Ltd., as  Global Co-ordinators and  GasLog Ltd., GasLog
Carriers Ltd., GasLog Partners LP and GasLog Partners Holdings LLC  as Guarantors; please
see ‘‘Item 5. Operating and Financial Review  and  Prospects—B. Liquidity and Capital
Resources—Credit Facilities’’.

(q) Registration Rights Agreement among GasLog  Ltd.  and the shareholders named therein,
dated as of June 22, 2020; please see ‘‘Item 7. Major Shareholders and Related Party
Transactions—B. Related Party Transactions—Registration Rights Agreement’’.

(r) Facility Agreement dated July 16, 2020,  relating to $576,887,500 loan facility among
GAS-one Ltd., GAS-two Ltd., GAS-six Ltd., GAS-nine  Ltd.,  GAS-ten Ltd.  and
GAS-eighteen Ltd. as borrowers, ABN Amro Bank N.V., Citigroup Global Markets Limited,
Nordea Bank ABP, Filial I Norge and HSBC Bank  PLC as mandated  lead arrangers  and
Credit Agricole Corporate and Investment Bank, Unicredit  Bank AG and National Australia
Bank Limited as arrangers, with ABN Amro  Bank N.V. as agent and security  agent and  ABN
Amro Bank N.V., Citigroup Global Markets Limited and Nordea Bank ABO, Filial  I Norge as
bookrunners, guaranteed by GasLog Ltd., GasLog Carriers Ltd., GasLog Partners  LP  and
GasLog Partners Holdings LLC; please  see ‘‘Item 5.  Operating and Financial Review and
Prospects—B. Liquidity and Capital Resources—Credit Facilities’’.

(s) Facility Agreement dated July 16,  2020, relating to $260,331,250 loan facility  among

GAS-twenty Ltd., GAS-seven Ltd. and GAS-eight Ltd.,  as borrowers,  BNP Paribas  and Credit
Suisse AG, as mandated lead arrangers, with BNP  Paribas as  agent and security agent and
Credit Suisse AG as global co-ordinator  and bookrunner, guaranteed by GasLog Partners LP
and GasLog Partners Holdings LLC; please see  ‘‘Item 5. Operating  and Financial Review and
Prospects—B. Liquidity and Capital Resources—Credit Facilities’’.

(t) Facility Agreement dated July 16,  2020, relating to $200,000,000 loan facility  among

GAS-twenty seven Ltd., GAS-twenty one Ltd.  and GAS-nineteen Ltd., as borrowers,  DNB
(UK) Ltd. and ING Bank N.V., London Branch, as  mandated lead arrangers, with  DNB Bank
ASA, London Branch as agent and security  agent,  DNB (UK) Ltd. and ING Bank N.V.,
London Branch as bookrunners and ING Bank N.V,  London  Branch as structuring and
documentation bank, guaranteed by GasLog  Partners  LP, GasLog  Partners  Holdings LLC,
GasLog Ltd. and GasLog Carriers Ltd.; please see  ‘‘Item  5. Operating and Financial Review
and Prospects—B. Liquidity and Capital Resources—Credit Facilities’’.

(u) Facility Agreement dated July 30, 2020,  relating to a  $96,800,000 loan  facility among

GAS-fifteen Ltd. as Borrower and National  Bank of Greece S.A. as Arranger, Agent and
Security  Agent, guaranteed by GasLog Ltd. and GasLog Carriers Ltd.; please see ‘‘Item  5.
Operating and Financial Review and Prospects—B. Liquidity and Capital  Resources—Credit
Facilities’’.

(v) Agreement and Plan of Merger dated February  21, 2021 among GasLog Ltd., GEPIF III

Crown Bidco L.P. and GEPIF III Crown MergerCo Limited see  Item  7. Major Shareholders
and Related Party  Transactions—B. Related Party  Transactions—Merger and  Rollover
Agreements’’.

(w) Rollover Agreement dated February  21, 2021 among GasLog Ltd., GEPIF III  Crown

Bidco L.P. and the Rolling Shareholders see Item 7. Major  Shareholders and Related Party
Transactions—B. Related Party Transactions—Merger and Rollover  Agreements’’.

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D. Exchange Controls and Other Limitations Affecting  Security  Holders

Under Bermuda law, there are currently no restrictions on the  export or import of capital,
including foreign exchange controls or  restrictions that affect the remittance  of dividends, interest  or
other payments to  non-resident holders  of our common shares.

We  have been designated by the Bermuda  Monetary Authority as a non-resident  for Bermuda
exchange control purposes. This designation allows us to engage in transactions  in currencies other than
the Bermuda dollar, and there are no exchange control  restrictions on our ability to transfer funds
(other than funds denominated in Bermuda dollars) in  and  out of Bermuda or to pay  dividends  to  U.S.
residents who are holders of our common  shares.

Under Bermuda law, ‘‘exempted’’ companies are companies formed for  the  purpose of conducting

business outside Bermuda from a principal place of  business in  Bermuda.  As an exempted company,  we
may not, without a license or consent  granted  by the  Minister of Finance, participate  in certain business
transactions, including transactions involving Bermuda landholding rights  and  the carrying on of
business of any kind, for which we are  not  licensed in Bermuda.

E. Tax Considerations

Bermuda Tax Considerations

The following discussion summarizes the material Bermuda tax consequences  to  us of our activities

and, subject to the limitations described above, to you as a holder  of  our shares. At  the present time,
there is no Bermuda income or profits  tax, withholding tax, capital gains tax,  capital transfer tax,  estate
duty or inheritance tax payable by us or  by our  shareholders in respect of our shares. We have  obtained
an assurance from the Minister of Finance of Bermuda under  the Exempted Undertakings Tax
Protection Act 1966 of Bermuda, as amended, that,  in the event  that any  legislation  is enacted  in
Bermuda imposing any tax computed  on  profits or income, or  computed on any capital asset, gain  or
appreciation or any tax in the nature  of  estate duty or inheritance  tax, such tax  shall not, until
March 31, 2035, be applicable to us or to any  of our operations or to our shares,  debentures or other
obligations except insofar as such tax  applies to persons ordinarily resident in Bermuda or is payable by
us in respect of real property owned  or leased  by  us  in Bermuda. Given the  limited  duration of the
Bermuda Minister  of Finance’s assurance, we  can give no assurance that we  will  not  be  subject to any
Bermuda tax after March 31, 2035.

Material U.S. Federal Income Tax Considerations

The following discussion summarizes the material U.S. Federal income tax consequences  to  us of
our  activities  and, subject to the limitations described above, to you as  a holder of our common shares
or Preference Shares. For purposes of this tax discussion, ‘‘we’’  or ‘‘our’’ refer to GasLog  Ltd.

The following discussion of U.S. Federal income tax  matters is  based on the Code, judicial
decisions, administrative pronouncements,  and existing  and proposed regulations  issued by the U.S.
Department of the Treasury, all of which are subject to change,  possibly with  retroactive effect. This
discussion does not address any U.S.  state or local taxes.  You are encouraged to consult your own  tax
advisor  regarding the particular U.S. Federal,  state and local  and  foreign income and  other  tax
consequences of acquiring, owning and  disposing of  our common  shares or  Preference Shares that may
be applicable to you.

U.S. Taxation of Our Operating Income

We  have elected to treat a majority of  our subsidiaries as  disregarded entities for U.S.  Federal
income tax purposes. The entities that are considered  disregarded entities for  U.S. Federal income tax
purposes  should be treated as branches rather than corporations for  U.S. Federal income tax purposes.

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Currently, no election has been filed  to  treat GasLog LNG  Services  Ltd.,  GasLog Services  UK Ltd.,
GasLog Asia Pte. Ltd., GasLog Investments Ltd.,  GasLog Monaco  S.A.M., GasLog Shipping  Limited,
GasLog Shipping Company Ltd., and Egypt LNG Shipping Ltd. as disregarded entities for U.S.  Federal
income tax purposes. As a result, these entities and GasLog Services U.S.  Inc. will continue to be
treated as corporations for U.S. Federal income tax purposes.

U.S. Taxation of Shipping Income

Subject to the discussion of ‘‘effectively connected’’ income below, unless  we are  exempt  from U.S.

Federal income tax under the rules contained in Section  883 of the  Code,  we will be subject to U.S.
Federal income tax under the rules of  Section 887 of the Code, which  imposes on  us  a 4% U.S.
Federal income tax in respect of our U.S.  source gross transportation income (without  the allowance
for deductions).

For this purpose, U.S. source gross transportation income includes 50% of  the shipping income
that is attributable to transportation  that  begins or  ends (but that  does not both begin and end) in the
United States. Shipping income attributable to transportation exclusively between  non-U.S. ports  is
generally not subject to any U.S. Federal  income  tax.

For this purpose, ‘‘shipping income’’  means income that  is derived  from:

(i)

the use of ships;

(ii) the hiring or leasing of ships for  use on a  time, operating or  bareboat  charter basis;

(iii) the participation in a pool, partnership,  strategic alliance, joint operating  agreement or other
joint venture we directly or indirectly  own or participate  in that generates such  income; or

(iv) the performance of services directly related to those uses.

Under Section 883 of the Code and the regulations thereunder, we will be exempt from U.S.

Federal income tax on our U.S. source  gross transportation income  if:

(i) we are organized in a foreign country (the ‘‘country of organization’’) that grants  an

‘‘equivalent exemption’’ to corporations organized in the  United States; and

(ii) either

(a) more than 50% of the value  of our shares  is owned, directly  or indirectly, by individuals
who are ‘‘residents’’ of our country of organization  or of another  foreign country that
grants an equivalent exemption to corporations organized  in the United States (the ‘‘50%
Ownership Test’’), or

(b) our shares are ‘‘primarily and regularly traded  on an  established  securities market’’ in  our
country of organization, in another country that grants an equivalent exemption to U.S.
corporations, or in the United States (the ‘‘Publicly-Traded Test’’).

We  have qualified  for the statutory tax exemption for the year of 2019 and  intend to continue to
qualify for the foreseeable future. However, no  assurance can be given  that  this will be the  case. If we
are not entitled to  this exemption under Section  883 for any taxable year we  would be subject to the
4% U.S. Federal income (subject to the discussion  of ‘‘effectively connected income’’ below).

To the extent the exemption under Section 883 is  unavailable,  our U.S. source gross  transportation
income in future years that is considered  to be ‘‘effectively  connected’’  with the  conduct  of  a U.S.  trade
or business is subject to the U.S. corporate income tax currently  imposed at  rate of up to 21% (net of
applicable deductions). In addition, we  may be subject  to  the 30% U.S. ‘‘branch profits’’ tax  on
earnings effectively connected with the conduct  of such trade or business, as determined  after

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allowance for certain adjustments, and  on  certain interest paid or deemed paid attributable to the
conduct of our U.S. trade or business.

Our U.S. source gross transportation  income would be considered effectively connected with  the

conduct of a U.S. trade or business only  if:

(i) we had, or were considered to have, a  fixed  place of business in  the United States  involved in

the earning of U.S. source gross transportation  income; and

(ii) substantially all of our U.S. source gross transportation  income was attributable to regularly
scheduled transportation, such as the operation  of a ship that followed a published schedule
with repeated sailings at regular intervals between the same points for voyages that begin or
end in the United States.

We  believe that we will not meet these conditions because we  will not  have, or permit

circumstances that would result in having,  such  a fixed place  of  business in the United  States or any
ship sailing to or from the United States  on a  regularly  scheduled  basis.

In addition, income attributable to transportation that both  begins and  ends in the  United States is

not subject to the tax rules described above.  Such income is subject to either  a 30% gross-basis  tax or
to U.S. corporate income tax on net  income at  a rate of up to 21% (and the  branch profits  tax
discussed above). Although there can be no assurance, we  do not expect to  engage in transportation
that produces shipping income of this  type.

Taxation of Gain on Sale of Shipping Assets

Regardless of whether we qualify for  the exemption under Section 883 of the  Code,  we will not be

subject to U.S. Federal income taxation with  respect to gain realized on a sale of a ship, provided the
sale is considered to occur outside of  the  United States (as determined under U.S. tax  principles). In
general, a sale of a ship will be considered  to  occur outside of the United States for this  purpose if title
to the ship (and risk of loss with respect  to the ship) passes  to  the  buyer outside of the  United States.
We  expect that any sale of a ship will  be  so structured  that it  will be considered to occur  outside of  the
United States.

U.S. Federal Income Taxation of U.S. Holders

You are a ‘‘U.S. holder’’ if you are a beneficial  owner of  our common  shares or  Preference Shares

that owns (actually or constructively)  less than 10%  of  our equity  and you are  (i) a  U.S. citizen  or
resident,  (ii) a U.S. corporation (or other  U.S. entity taxable as a corporation), (iii) an estate the
income of which is subject to U.S. Federal income taxation regardless of its  source or  (iv) a trust  if
(x) a court within the United States is  able to exercise primary jurisdiction  over the administration of
the trust and one or more U.S. persons have  the authority to control all substantial decisions of the
trust or (y) the trust has a valid election  in effect to be treated  as a U.S. Federal income tax purposes.

If a  partnership holds our common shares or Preference Shares, the  tax  treatment of a partner will
generally depend upon the status of  the partner and upon the  activities of the  partnership. If you are a
partner in a partnership holding our  common shares or Preference Shares, you  should consult your tax
advisor.

Distributions on Our Common Shares  and Preference Shares

Subject to the discussion of ‘‘passive foreign  investment companies’’,  or  ‘‘PFICs’’, below, any

distributions with respect to our common  shares or Preference  Shares that you  receive from us
generally will constitute dividends to the  extent of our  current or accumulated earnings and  profits (as
determined under U.S. tax principles).  Distributions  in excess of  our earnings and  profits will be treated

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first as a nontaxable return of capital  to  the extent of your tax basis in our common  shares or
Preference Shares (on a dollar-for-dollar basis) and thereafter as capital gain.

If you are a U.S. corporation (or a U.S. entity taxable as a corporation), you generally will not be
entitled to claim a dividends-received  deduction with  respect  to  any distributions you receive from us.

Dividends paid with respect to our common  shares or  Preference Shares will generally be treated
as ‘‘passive category income’’ for purposes of computing allowable  foreign tax credits for  U.S. foreign
tax credit purposes.

If you are an individual, trust or estate, dividends  you receive  from us should be treated as
‘‘qualified dividend income’’ taxed at  a maximum  preferential rate of 15%  or 20%, depending on the
income level of the individual, provided  that:

(i) our common shares or Preference Shares, as the  case may be, are readily tradable on  an

established securities market in the United States (such as the  NYSE);

(ii) we are not a PFIC for the tax year during which the dividend is  paid or the immediately

preceding tax year (see the discussion  below under ‘‘—PFIC Status and Significant Tax
Consequences’’);

(iii) you own our common shares or  Preference  Shares for more than  60 days in  the 121-day

period beginning 60 days before the date on  which the common  shares or  Preference Shares
become ex-dividend;

(iv) you are not under an obligation to make  related payments  with respect  to  positions  in

substantially similar or related property;  and

(v) certain other conditions are met.

Special rules may apply to any ‘‘extraordinary dividend’’. Generally, an extraordinary dividend is a
dividend in an amount that is equal to  (or in excess of) 10% of your adjusted tax  basis (or fair  market
value in certain circumstances) in a share of  our common  shares (5% in  the case of Preference Shares).
If we  pay an extraordinary dividend on  our common shares  or Preference Shares that is  treated  as
‘‘qualified dividend income’’ and if you are an individual, estate or trust, then any loss derived by you
from a subsequent sale or exchange of  such common shares  or Preference Shares will be treated as
long-term capital loss to the extent of such dividend.

There is  no assurance that dividends you receive from us will be eligible  for the preferential  tax
rates applicable to qualified dividend income. Dividends you receive from  us  that  are not eligible for
the preferential tax rates will be taxed  at  the  ordinary income  rates.

Sale, Exchange or Other Disposition of Common  Shares and Preference Shares

Provided that we are not a PFIC for any tax year, you generally will recognize taxable gain  or loss

upon a sale, exchange or other disposition of our common shares or Preference  Shares  in an amount
equal to the difference between the amount realized by you from such sale, exchange or other
disposition and your tax basis in such  shares. Such gain or loss will be treated as  long-term capital gain
or loss if your holding period is greater  than one year at the time of the sale, exchange  or other
disposition. Such capital gain or loss  will generally be treated as U.S.  source  income  or loss,  as
applicable, for U.S. foreign tax credit purposes. Your ability to deduct capital losses against ordinary
income is subject to limitations.

Unearned Income Medicare Contribution  Tax

Each  U.S. holder who is an individual, estate or trust  is generally  subject to a 3.8% Medicare tax
on the lesser of (i) such U.S. holder’s  ‘‘net investment  income’’ for  the  relevant tax year, and  (ii) the

144

excess of such U.S. holder’s modified adjusted gross income  for the  tax  year over a  certain threshold
(which in the case of individuals will be between  $125,000 and $250,000, depending on  the individual’s
circumstances). For this purpose, net  investment income generally includes dividends on and capital
gains from the sale, exchange or other  disposition of our common shares or Preference Shares, subject
to certain exceptions. You are encouraged  to consult your own tax  advisor regarding  the applicability of
the Medicare tax to your income and gains from  your ownership of our common  shares or Preference
Shares.

PFIC Status and Significant Tax Consequences

In General

Special U.S. Federal income tax rules apply to you if you  hold shares  in a non-U.S. corporation
that is classified as a PFIC for U.S. Federal  income tax purposes.  In general,  under Section  1297 of the
Code, we will be treated as a PFIC in  any  tax year in  which, after applying certain look-through rules,
either:

(i) at least 75% of our gross income including our proportionate share of the  gross income of our
vessel-owning subsidiaries for such tax year consists of passive income (e.g.,  dividends,  interest,
capital gains and rents derived other  than  in the active conduct of a rental business); or

(ii) at least 50% of the average value of our  assets including  our proportionate share  of the assets

of our vessel-owning subsidiaries during  such tax year that produce,  or  are held  for the
production of, passive income.

Income we earn, or are deemed to earn, in connection  with the  performance of services  will not
constitute passive income. By contrast,  rental income will generally constitute  passive  income  (unless we
are treated under certain special rules  as  deriving  our rental  income  in the active conduct of a trade or
business).

There are legal uncertainties involved in determining whether the income  derived from time
chartering activities constitutes rental income or  income derived from the  performance of services.  In
Tidewater Inc. v. United States, 565 F.2d 299 (5th Cir. 2009), the Fifth Circuit held that  income derived
from certain time chartering activities should be treated as  rental income rather than services  income
for purposes of a provision of the Code relating  to  foreign sales  corporations.  In  published guidance,
however, the IRS stated that it disagreed with the  holding  in Tidewater, and specified that time charters
should be treated as service contracts.  Since we have chartered all our ships  to  unrelated charterers on
the basis of time charters and since we expect  to  continue to  do so, we believe that we are not a  PFIC.
We  have received an opinion from our counsel, Cravath, Swaine & Moore LLP, that (i)  the income we
receive from time  charters and the assets  engaged in generating such  income  should not be treated as
passive income or assets which produce (or are held for  the  production of) passive income, respectively,
and (ii) we should currently not be a  PFIC and in  the future, assuming  no material change in the
nature of our activities and assets. This opinion  is based  and  its  accuracy is conditioned on
representations, valuations and projections provided  by  us  regarding  the nature of our assets, income
and charters to our counsel. While we  believe these representations,  valuations and projections to be
accurate, the shipping market is volatile  and no  assurance can  be  given that they will  continue to be
accurate. Moreover, we have not sought, and  we do  not  expect to seek,  an IRS  ruling on this  matter.
As a result, the IRS or a court could  disagree with  our  position. No  assurance can  be  given that this
result will not occur. In addition, although we intend to conduct our affairs in  a manner to avoid, to
the extent possible, being classified as  a PFIC  with respect  to  any tax year, we can  give no  assurance
that the nature of our operations will  not  change in  the future, or that we can avoid PFIC  status  in the
future.

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If we  were to be treated as a PFIC for  any tax year, you  generally  would be subject  to  one of three

different U.S. Federal income tax regimes,  as discussed below, depending  on whether or  not  you make
certain elections. Additionally, for each  year during which you own  our common shares or  Preference
Shares, we are a PFIC and the total value of  all  PFIC  stock  that you  directly or indirectly own  exceeds
certain thresholds, you will be required to file IRS Form  8621 with  your U.S. Federal income tax return
to report your ownership of our common shares or Preference Shares.

The PFIC rules are complex, and you are encouraged to consult your own tax advisor regarding

the PFIC rules, including the annual PFIC reporting requirement.

Taxation of U.S. Holders Making a Timely QEF Election

If we  were a PFIC and if you make a  timely  election to treat us  as a ‘‘Qualifying Electing Fund’’

for U.S. tax purposes (a ‘‘QEF Election’’),  you would  be  required to report  each  year  your pro  rata
share of our ordinary earnings and our  net capital gain for our tax year that ends  with or within your
tax year, regardless of whether we make  any distributions  to you. Such income inclusions would not be
eligible for the preferential tax rates  applicable to qualified dividend income (as discussed above under
‘‘U.S. Federal Income Taxation of U.S.  Holders—Distributions on Our  Common Shares and  Preference
Shares’’). Your adjusted tax basis in our  common  shares or  Preference Shares would  be  increased to
reflect such taxed but undistributed earnings  and  profits. Distributions of  earnings and profits  that  had
previously been taxed would result in a  corresponding reduction in your adjusted  tax basis in our
common shares or Preference Shares  and  would not  be  taxed again  once distributed. You  generally
would recognize capital gain or loss on  the sale,  exchange or other disposition of our common  shares
or Preference Shares. Even if you make a  QEF  Election  for one  of our  tax years, if we were  a PFIC
for a prior tax year during which you held our  common  shares  or  Preference  Shares  and for which  you
did not make a timely QEF Election,  you would  also be subject to a more adverse regime  described
below under ‘‘—Taxation of U.S. Holders  That Make  No Election’’.

You would make a QEF Election by  completing and filing IRS  Form 8621 with your  U.S. Federal

income tax return for the year for which the  election is made in accordance  with the relevant
instructions. If we were to become aware  that we  were to be treated as a PFIC  for any tax year,  we
would notify all U.S. holders of such  treatment and would provide all necessary information  to  any U.S.
holder who requests such information in order to make the QEF Election described above with  respect
to us.

Taxation of U.S. Holders Making a Timely ‘‘Mark-to-Market’’ Election

Alternatively, if we were to be treated  as a PFIC  for any tax year and, as we believe, our common

shares or Preference Shares are treated as  ‘‘marketable stock’’, you would be allowed to make a
‘‘mark-to-market’’ election with respect  to  our common  shares or  Preference Shares, provided  you
complete and file IRS Form 8621 with  your U.S. Federal income  tax return for the year for which the
election is made in accordance with the  relevant instructions. If that election is made,  you generally
would include as ordinary income in each  tax year the excess, if any, of the fair  market value of our
common shares or Preference Shares  at  the end  of the tax year over your  adjusted tax basis in our
common shares or Preference Shares.  You also  would be permitted an ordinary loss in respect  of  the
excess, if any, of your adjusted tax basis  in our common  shares or  Preference Shares over  its  fair
market value  at the end of the tax year  (but only to the extent  of  the net amount previously included in
income as a result of the mark-to-market election). Your tax basis in our  common shares  or Preference
Shares would be adjusted to reflect any such income or loss amount. Gain realized on the sale,
exchange or other disposition of our  common shares  or Preference  Shares would be treated as  ordinary
income, and any loss realized on the  sale, exchange or other  disposition of the  common shares or
Preference Shares would be treated as  ordinary loss to the extent that such  loss does not exceed the
net mark-to-market gains previously included  by  you.

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Taxation of U.S. Holders That Make No Election

Finally, if we were treated as a PFIC for  any tax year and  if  you  did not  make  either a QEF
Election or a ‘‘mark-to-market’’ election  for that year, you would be subject to special rules with
respect to (i) any excess distribution (that  is, the portion of any distributions received by you on our
common shares or Preference Shares  in a  tax year in excess of 125% of the average  annual
distributions received by you in the three preceding tax years, or, if shorter, your holding period for our
common shares or Preference Shares)  and (ii)  any  gain realized on the  sale, exchange or other
disposition of our common shares or Preference Shares. Under these special rules:

(i)

the excess distribution or gain would be allocated ratably over your aggregate holding period
for our common shares or Preference  Shares;

(ii) the amount allocated to the current  tax  year and any tax year prior to the tax year we  were
first treated as a PFIC with respect to  such U.S. holder who  does not make a QEF Election
or a ‘‘mark-to-market’’ election would be taxed as  ordinary income; and

(iii) the amount allocated to each of  the other tax years would be subject to tax at  the highest rate
of tax in effect for the applicable class of taxpayer for  that year,  and an interest  charge for the
deemed deferral benefit would be imposed  with respect  to the resulting tax attributable to
each such other tax year.

U.S. Federal Income Taxation of Non-U.S.  Holders

You are a ‘‘non-U.S. holder’’ if you are a  beneficial owner of  our common shares or  Preference

Shares (other than a partnership for  U.S.  tax  purposes) and  you are  not  a U.S.  holder.

Distributions on Our Common Shares  and Preference Shares

You generally will not be subject to U.S.  Federal income or  withholding taxes on a distribution

received from us with respect to our common shares  or Preference  Shares,  unless the  income  arising
from such distribution is effectively connected with your conduct of a trade or business in the  United
States. If you are entitled to the benefits of an applicable income tax treaty  with respect to that income,
that income generally is taxable in the  United  States only  if  it is  attributable to a permanent
establishment maintained by you in the United States.

Sale, Exchange or Other Disposition of Our Common Shares and Preference Shares

You generally will not be subject to U.S.  Federal income tax or  withholding  tax on any  gain

realized upon the sale, exchange or other disposition of our common shares or Preference  Shares,
unless:

(i)

the gain is effectively connected  with your  conduct of  a  trade or business in the United  States.
If you are entitled to the benefits of an applicable income tax treaty with respect to that gain,
that gain generally is taxable in the United States only if it is attributable  to  a permanent
establishment maintained by you in the United States; or

(ii) you are an individual who is present in  the United  States  for 183 days or more  during the tax

year of disposition and certain other  conditions  are met.

Gain that is effectively connected with the conduct of a trade or business in the  United States (or

so treated) generally will be subject to  U.S. Federal  income tax (net of certain  deductions) at regular
U.S. Federal income tax rates. If you are a corporate non-U.S. holder, your  earnings and profits  that
are attributable to the effectively connected  income  (subject  to  certain adjustments)  may be subject to
an additional U.S. branch profits tax at a rate of  30% (or such lower rate  as may be specified  by  an
applicable tax treaty).

147

United States Backup Withholding and Information  Reporting

In General

In general, if you are a non-corporate  U.S. holder,  dividend  payments (or other taxable
distributions) made within the United  States will be subject  to  information reporting  requirements.
Backup withholding may apply to such payments if you:

(i)

fail to provide an accurate taxpayer identification number;

(ii) are notified by the IRS that you have  failed to report  all interest  or dividends required  to  be

shown on your U.S. Federal income tax  returns;  or

(iii) in certain circumstances, fail to comply  with applicable certification requirements.

If you are a non-U.S. holder, you may be required to establish your exemption from information

reporting and backup withholding by certifying  your status on  IRS Form W-8BEN,  W-8BEN-E,
W-8ECI or W-8IMY, as applicable.

If you sell our common shares or Preference Shares to or  through a U.S. office or  broker, the

payment of the sales proceeds is subject  to both U.S. backup withholding  and information reporting
unless you certify that you are a non-U.S. person, under  penalties  of  perjury,  or you  otherwise establish
an exemption. If you sell our common  shares  or Preference  Shares through a non-U.S. office of  a
non-U.S.  broker and the sales proceeds are paid to you  outside the United States, then information
reporting and backup withholding generally will  not  apply to that payment.

However, U.S. information reporting requirements (but not backup  withholding)  will  apply to a

payment of sales proceeds, even if that payment is made  outside the United States, if you sell  our
common shares or Preference Shares  through a non-U.S. office of a broker that is a U.S. person or has
certain other connections with the United States.

Backup withholding tax is not an additional  tax. Rather, you generally may obtain a  credit for any

amount withheld against its liability for  U.S. federal income tax (and obtain a  refund  of any  amounts
withheld in excess of such liability) by  accurately completing and timely filing  certain  required
information with the IRS.

Tax Return Disclosure

U.S. individuals who hold certain ‘‘specified  foreign financial assets’’ (which include shares in a

foreign corporation) with values in excess of  certain dollar thresholds are subject to U.S.  return
disclosure obligations (and related penalties for failure  to  disclose).  Such U.S. individuals are  required
to file IRS Form 8938 with their U.S.  Federal income tax returns.  Regulations extend this  reporting
requirement to certain entities that are treated  as formed or availed of to hold direct or indirect
interests in specified foreign financial assets based  on certain  objective  criteria. You are encouraged to
consult  your own tax advisors concerning the  filing of IRS Form 8938.

F. Dividends and Paying Agents

Not applicable.

G. Statement by Experts

Not applicable.

148

H. Documents on Display

We  are subject to the informational requirements of the Exchange  Act.  In  accordance  with these
requirements, we file reports and other  information  as a foreign private  issuer with  the SEC. You  may
obtain copies of all or any part of such  materials from the SEC upon  payment of prescribed  fees.  You
may also inspect reports and other information regarding  companies, such as us, that file electronically
with the SEC without charge at a web site maintained  by  the SEC at http://www.sec.gov.

I. Subsidiary Information

Not applicable.

ITEM 11. QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT  MARKET RISK

We  are exposed to various market risks, including interest rate and foreign currency exchange
risks. The Group makes use of derivative financial instruments such as derivative contracts to maintain
the desired level of exposure arising  from  these risks.

A discussion of our accounting policies for  derivative  financial  instruments  is included in Note 2 to
our  audited consolidated financial statements included elsewhere in this report. Further  information on
our  exposure to market risk is included  in Note 24 to our  audited consolidated financial statements
included elsewhere in this report.

ITEM 12. DESCRIPTION OF SECURITIES OTHER  THAN  EQUITY SECURITIES

Not applicable.

149

PART II

ITEM 13. DEFAULTS, DIVIDEND ARREARAGES AND DELINQUENCIES

There has been no material default in  the payment of principal, interest,  sinking or purchase fund
installments or any other material default  relating to the  Group’s debt.  There have been no  arrears in
payment of dividends on, or material delinquency  with respect  to,  any class of preference shares  of the
Group.

ITEM 14. MATERIAL MODIFICATIONS TO THE RIGHTS  OF SECURITY HOLDERS  AND USE
OF PROCEEDS

None.

ITEM 15. CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES

A. Disclosure Controls and Procedures

Our management, with the participation of our Chief Executive  Officer and Chief Financial

Officer, has evaluated the effectiveness  of the  design and operation  of  our  disclosure controls and
procedures, as defined in Rules 13a-15(e)  and 15d-15(e) under the  Exchange Act as  of December  31,
2020. Based on our evaluation, the Chief  Executive Officer and  the Chief Financial  Officer have
concluded that our disclosure controls  and procedures were effective  as of December  31, 2020.

B. Management’s Annual Report on  Internal Control Over Financial Reporting

Our management is responsible for establishing and maintaining adequate internal  controls over
financial reporting, as such term is defined in Rule 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f)  of  the Exchange Act and
for the assessment of the effectiveness of  internal control over financial reporting. Our  internal controls
over financial reporting are designed  under the supervision  of  our Chief Executive Officer and Chief
Financial Officer to provide reasonable  assurance regarding the reliability of  financial reporting  and the
preparation of financial statements for external purposes in  accordance with International Financial
Reporting Standards.

Our internal control over financial reporting includes those  policies and procedures that:
(i) pertain to the maintenance of records that, in  reasonable detail, accurately and  fairly reflect  the
transactions and dispositions of our assets; (ii) provide reasonable assurance that transactions  are
recorded  as necessary to permit preparation of our financial statements in  accordance  with IFRS and
that our receipts and expenditures are being made in accordance with authorizations of  our
management and directors; and (iii) provide reasonable assurance  regarding prevention or timely
detection of unauthorized acquisition,  use  or disposition  of  our assets that could have a  material  effect
on the financial statements.

Because of the inherent limitations of internal  controls over financial reporting, misstatements  may
not be prevented or detected on a timely basis. Also,  projections  of any  evaluation of the effectiveness
of the internal control over financial  reporting to future  periods are subject to the  risk that the  controls
may become inadequate because of changes in  conditions,  or that the degree of compliance with  the
policies or procedures may deteriorate.

Our management conducted an evaluation of  the effectiveness of our internal  control  over

financial reporting using criteria issued  by the Committee of  Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway
Commission (COSO) in the Internal Control-Integrated Framework (2013  framework). Based on  the
evaluation, our management concluded  that our internal control  over financial reporting was  effective
as of  December 31, 2020.

150

The Company’s independent registered public accounting firm has  issued an attestation  report on

the Company’s internal control over financial reporting.

C. Attestation Report of the Registered  Public Accounting Firm

The effectiveness of the Company’s internal control over financial  reporting  as of December 31,

2020 has been audited by Deloitte LLP,  an independent  registered  public accounting firm, as stated in
their report which appears below.

REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

To the shareholders and the Board of Directors of GasLog Ltd.

Opinion on Internal Control over Financial  Reporting

We  have audited the internal control over  financial reporting of  GasLog Ltd and subsidiaries (the

‘‘Company’’) as of December 31, 2020, based on criteria established in Internal Control—Integrated
Framework (2013) issued by the Committee of Sponsoring  Organizations of the Treadway Commission
(COSO). In our opinion, the Company maintained, in all material respects,  effective  internal control
over financial reporting as of December  31, 2020, based on  criteria established in Internal Control—
Integrated Framework (2013) issued by COSO.

We  have also audited, in accordance  with the standards of  the Public Company Accounting

Oversight Board (United States) (PCAOB),  the consolidated  financial  statements as of and for the year
ended December 31, 2020, of the Company and our report  dated March 5, 2021,  expressed  an
unqualified opinion on those financial statements.

Basis for Opinion

The Company’s management is responsible for maintaining effective internal control over  financial

reporting and for its assessment of the  effectiveness  of  internal control  over financial reporting,
included in the accompanying Management’s  Annual  Report on Internal Control  Over  Financial
Reporting. Our responsibility is to express an  opinion on  the Company’s internal control over financial
reporting based on our audit. We are  a public accounting firm registered  with the PCAOB and are
required to be independent with respect  to the Company  in accordance with the U.S. federal  securities
laws and the applicable rules and regulations of the Securities  and Exchange Commission and the
PCAOB.

We  conducted our audit in accordance with the standards of  the PCAOB. Those standards require

that we plan and perform the audit to  obtain reasonable assurance  about whether  effective  internal
control over financial reporting was maintained in all material respects.  Our  audit included obtaining
an understanding of internal control over  financial reporting, assessing  the risk  that  a material
weakness exists, testing and evaluating the design and operating effectiveness of internal  control based
on the assessed risk, and performing such other procedures as we considered  necessary  in the
circumstances. We believe that our audit  provides  a reasonable basis  for  our opinion.

Definition and Limitations of Internal  Control over Financial Reporting

A company’s internal control over financial reporting is a process designed to provide  reasonable

assurance regarding the reliability of  financial  reporting and the preparation  of  financial  statements  for
external  purposes in accordance with  generally accepted accounting  principles. A company’s internal
control over financial reporting includes those policies and procedures that (1)  pertain to the
maintenance of records that, in reasonable  detail, accurately and fairly reflect the  transactions and
dispositions of the assets of the company; (2) provide reasonable assurance that transactions  are

151

recorded  as necessary to permit preparation of financial statements in  accordance with generally
accepted accounting principles, and that receipts and expenditures of the company are being made  only
in accordance with authorizations of management and directors of the company; and  (3) provide
reasonable assurance regarding prevention  or timely detection of unauthorized acquisition, use, or
disposition of the company’s assets that  could have a material effect on the financial statements.

Because of its inherent limitations, internal control over  financial  reporting may not prevent or

detect misstatements. Also, projections  of any evaluation  of  effectiveness to future periods are  subject
to the risk that controls may become inadequate  because of changes in conditions, or  that  the degree
of compliance with the policies or procedures may deteriorate.

/s/ Deloitte LLP

London, United Kingdom

March 5, 2021

D. Changes in Internal Control over  Financial  Reporting

During  the period covered by this annual report, we have made no changes to our internal  control

over financial reporting that have materially affected or are  reasonably likely  to  materially affect  our
internal control over financial reporting.

ITEM 16.

[RESERVED]

ITEM 16.A. AUDIT COMMITTEE FINANCIAL EXPERT

Donald J. Kintzer, whose biographical details are included in ‘‘Item 6. Directors,  Senior

Management and Employees—A. Directors and Senior Management’’, qualifies as  an ‘‘audit  committee
financial expert’’. Our board of directors  has  affirmatively determined that Mr. Kintzer meets the
definition of ‘‘independent director’’  for purposes of serving on an audit committee under  applicable
SEC and NYSE rules.

ITEM 16.B. CODE OF ETHICS

We  have adopted a Code of Business Conduct and Ethics  for all directors, officers, employees and

agents of  the Company, a copy of which is posted  on our website and may be viewed at
http://www.gaslogltd.com. The information contained on or connected  to  our website is not a part of this
annual report. We will also provide a paper copy of this document  upon the  written  request  of a
shareholder at no cost. Shareholders may  direct  their  requests to the attention of our General Counsel,
c/o GasLog LNG Services Ltd., 69 Akti  Miaouli, 18537  Piraeus, Greece. No waivers  of the Code of
Business Conduct and Ethics have been  granted  to  any person  during  the fiscal year ended
December 31, 2020.

We  have also adopted a Trading Policy that generally prohibits directors, officers,  employees,
controlling shareholders and their respective related parties (‘‘Covered Persons’’)  from trading  in
securities of the Company while in possession of material  non-public  information regarding the
Company, or  in securities of any other  company while  in possession of material non-public information
regarding that company, which knowledge  was obtained in the  course of service  to  or employment  with
GasLog. The Trading Policy also imposes  certain pre-clearance requirements  and quarterly blackout
periods. In addition, among other things, the  Trading  Policy generally prohibits Covered Persons from
(i) trading in equity securities of the Company  on a  short-term basis,  (ii) purchasing securities of  the
Company on margin, (iii) purchasing or  selling derivatives related to securities  of the Company  (except
for certain ‘‘permitted hedging derivatives’’, which the Trading Policy defines  as any  derivative
transaction to (x) hedge a position in Company securities held by  the relevant Covered Person for  more

152

than 12 months, (y) with respect to the number  of  Company securities  less  than or  equal to the amount
such Covered Person could sell at such time  in compliance  with Rule 144 under the Securities Act of
1933, as amended, and (z) otherwise in  compliance with the  terms of the  Trading Policy)  and
(iv) selling Company securities short (other than short sales effected by an independent financial
institution that is party to a permitted  hedging derivative, in accordance  with its own standard  practices
and procedures, for the purpose of hedging  its own position  as a party to,  or facilitating the  entry by a
Covered Person into, such permitted hedging derivative).

ITEM 16.C. PRINCIPAL ACCOUNTANT FEES AND SERVICES

Deloitte LLP, an independent registered public accounting firm, has audited  our  annual financial

statements acting as our independent auditor  for the  fiscal  years  ended December 31, 2019  and
December 31, 2020.

The chart below sets forth the total amount  billed and accrued for Deloitte LLP for services
performed in 2019 and 2020, respectively, and breaks down these amounts by the category of service.
The fees paid to our principal accountant were  approved in  accordance with the  pre-approval policies
and procedures described below.

Audit fees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

2019

2020

(Expressed in
millions of
U.S. Dollars)
$1.7
$1.7

Total fees. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

$1.7

$1.7

Audit Fees

Audit fees represent compensation for professional services rendered for the audit  of  the
consolidated financial statements of the  Company and the  audit of the financial statements for its
individual subsidiary companies, fees for  the review  of the quarterly financial  information, as well as  in
connection with the review of registration  statements and related  consents  and comfort  letters, and any
other services required for SEC or other  regulatory filings.

Included in the audit fees for 2019 are fees of $0.2 million related to equity and bond related
transactions in 2019. Included in the audit  fees  for 2020 are fees of $0.2  million  related to equity  and
bond related transactions in 2020.

Tax Fees

No tax fees were billed by our principal accountant in 2019  and 2020.

Audit-Related Fees

No audit-related fees were billed by our principal accountant in 2019  and 2020.

All Other Fees

No other fees were billed by our principal  accountant in  2019 and  2020.

Pre-approval Policies and Procedures

Our audit and risk committee is responsible for  the appointment, compensation (subject to any

required shareholder approval or authorization),  retention  and  oversight of the  work of the
independent auditors. The audit and  risk  committee is  also responsible for reviewing and approving in

153

advance  the retention of the independent auditors for the performance of all audit and  lawfully
permitted non-audit services.

ITEM 16.D. EXEMPTIONS FROM  THE  LISTING STANDARDS  FOR AUDIT  COMMITTEES

None.

ITEM 16.E. PURCHASES OF EQUITY  SECURITIES BY  THE ISSUER AND  AFFILIATED
PURCHASERS

On November 28, 2018, the Company announced  that its board of directors had approved  a share

repurchase programme of up to $50.0 million of the Company’s common  shares covering the period
from January 1, 2019 to December 31,  2021.  Under the  terms of the  repurchase  programme, the
Company may repurchase common shares from  time to time, at the Company’s  discretion, on the  open
market or in privately negotiated transactions.  Any  repurchases are subject to market conditions,
applicable legal requirements and other considerations. The Company is not obligated under  the
repurchase programme to repurchase  any  specific dollar amount  or number  of common shares,  and the
repurchase programme may be modified, suspended or discontinued at any  time or  never utilized. Any
common shares repurchased by the Company under the programme will be held in treasury. 536,030
common shares had been repurchased by the Company between January 1, 2019 and December 31,
2020.

Set forth below are all purchases of our common shares by us and  our affiliated purchasers for the

period ended December 31, 2020.

Period

February 2020(1)
March 2020(2)
June 2020(3)
September 2020(4)

. . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . .
Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Total
Number of
Shares
Purchased

73,000
323,919
10,700,000
100,000
11,196,919

Average
Price Paid
per Share  ($)

$5.39
$6.16
$2.50
$2.74

Total
Number of
Maximum
Shares
Number of
Shares that
Purchased
as Part of May Yet Be
Purchased
Publicly
Under the
Announced
Plans  or
Plans or
Programs
Programs

—
323,919
—
—
—

—
—
—
—
—

(1)

(2)

(3)

(4)

Entities controlled by Peter Livanos, for his own benefit  and  the benefit  of his immediate family members,
and other directors and officers of GasLog, acquired these shares  in open-market transactions. These shares
are reflected in share ownership included in ‘‘Item  7. Major Shareholders and Related Party Transactions—
Major Shareholders.’’

Common shares repurchased under the authorized share repurchase programme of up to $50.0 million
covering the period from January 1, 2019  to  December 31, 2021.

Entities controlled by Peter Livanos, for his own benefit  and  the benefit  of his immediate family members,
Olympic LNG Investments Ltd. and other directors and officers  of GasLog, acquired these shares in a private
placement. These shares are reflected in share ownership  included in ‘‘Item 7. Major Shareholders and
Related Party Transactions—Major Shareholders.’’

Entities controlled by Peter Livanos, for his own benefit  and  the benefit  of his immediate family members,
and other directors and officers of GasLog, acquired these shares  in open-market transactions. These shares
are reflected in share ownership included in ‘‘Item  7. Major Shareholders and Related Party Transactions—
Major Shareholders.’’

154

ITEM 16.F. CHANGE IN COMPANY’S CERTIFYING ACCOUNTANT

Not Applicable

ITEM 16.G. CORPORATE GOVERNANCE

Statement of Significant Differences  Between Our  Corporate Governance  Practices and  the NYSE
Corporate Governance Standards for  U.S. Non-Controlled Issuers

Overview

Pursuant to certain exceptions for foreign private  issuers, we are not required to comply with
certain of the corporate governance practices  followed  by U.S. companies  under the NYSE listing
standards. However, pursuant to Section 303.A.11 of the NYSE  Listed  Company Manual  and the
requirements of Form 20-F, we are required  to  state any significant  ways in  which our corporate
governance practices differ from the  practices required  by the NYSE for U.S. companies. We  believe
that our established practices in the area  of corporate governance  are in line with  the spirit of the
NYSE standards and provide adequate protection  to  our  shareholders.  The significant  differences
between our corporate governance practices and the NYSE standards applicable to listed U.S.
companies are set forth below.

Corporate Governance, Nominating Committee

Pursuant to NYSE Rules 303A.04 and  303A.05, the NYSE requires that a  listed U.S. company
have a nominating/corporate governance committee and  a compensation committee, each composed
entirely of independent directors. The  NYSE  rules  do  not require foreign  private issuers like us to
establish a nominating/corporate governance committee. Similarly, under  Bermuda  law, we are not
required to have a nominating/corporate governance committee.  Accordingly,  we do not have  a
nominating/corporate governance committee.

ITEM 16.H. MINE SAFETY DISCLOSURE

Not applicable.

155

PART III

ITEM 17. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

Not applicable.

ITEM 18. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

Reference is made to pages F-1 through F-83 included herein by  reference.

ITEM 19. EXHIBITS

Exhibit No.

Description

1.1 Amended Memorandum of Association of GasLog  Ltd.(1)

1.2 Bye-laws of GasLog Ltd.(1)

1.3 Amendment to the Bye-laws of GasLog Ltd.(2)

2.1

Specimen Share Certificate(1)

2.2 Description of Registered Securities(8)

4.1

Form of Registration Rights Agreement(1)

4.3 Appendix to the Private Agreement of Professional Hiring  (English  translation), dated

December 1, 2010 and October 1, 2011, between Nea  Dimitra Ktimatikh Kai
Emporikh S.A. and GasLog LNG Services Ltd.(1)

4.4

4.5

Form of Indemnification Agreement for  the Company’s directors and certain officers(4)

Form of Restrictive Covenant Agreement(1)

4.6 GasLog Ltd. 2013 Omnibus Incentive Compensation Plan(3)

4.7

4.8

Facilities Agreement for $1,311,356,340 Loan  Facilities dated October 16, 2015  between
GAS-eleven Ltd., GAS-twelve Ltd., GAS-thirteen Ltd.,  GAS-fourteen Ltd.,  GAS-twenty
two Ltd., GAS-twenty three Ltd., GAS-twenty four Ltd., GAS-twenty five Ltd.,  as
borrowers, Citibank, N.A., London Branch,  Nordea  Bank AB, London  Branch,  The Export-
Import Bank of Korea, Bank of America,  National Association, BNP Paribas, Credit
Agricole Corporate and Investment Bank, Credit  Suisse AG, HSBC  Bank  plc,  ING
Bank N.V., London Branch, KEB Hana Bank, London Branch,  KfW IPEX-Bank GmbH,
National Australia Bank Limited, Oversea-Chinese Banking Corporation Limited, Societe
Generale and The Korea Development Bank as mandated lead  arrangers with Nordea
Bank AB, London Branch as agent, security agent, global co-ordinator  and  bookrunner  and
Citibank N.A., London Branch as export  credit agent, global  co-ordinator, bookrunner and
export credit agent co-ordinator, guaranteed  by GasLog Ltd. and GasLog Carriers Ltd.(4)*

Senior Facility Agreement dated  February 18, 2016,  relating to a $396,500,000 loan facility
among GAS-eighteen Ltd., GAS-nineteen Ltd.,  GAS-twenty Ltd., GAS-twenty one  Ltd.  and
GAS-twenty seven Ltd. as borrowers, ABN AMRO  Bank N.V. and DNB  (UK) Ltd. as
mandated lead arrangers, original lenders  and bookrunners,  DVB Bank America N.V. as
mandated lead arranger and original lender,  Commonwealth Bank  of Australia, ING
Bank N.V., London Branch, Credit Agricole  Corporate  and Investment Bank, National
Australia Bank Limited as original lenders  and DNB Bank  ASA,  London Branch  as agent
and security agent.(4)*

156

Exhibit No.

Description

4.9

4.10

4.11

4.12

Form of Corporate Guarantee between  GasLog Ltd. and DNB  Bank  ASA, London  Branch
(provided in respect of the Senior Facility Agreement, dated February  18, 2016).(4)

Form of Corporate Guarantee between  GasLog Partners LP and  DNB  Bank ASA,  London
Branch (provided in respect of the Senior Facility Agreement, dated February  18, 2016).(4)

Facilities Agreement dated July 19, 2016, relating to $1,050,000,000  Term  Loan and
Revolving Credit Facilities among GAS-one Ltd., GAS-two Ltd., GAS-six Ltd.,
GAS-seven Ltd., GAS-eight Ltd., GAS-nine  Ltd., GAS-ten Ltd.  and GAS-fifteen Ltd. as
borrowers, Citigroup Global Market Limited,  Credit Suisse AG, Nordea  Bank AB,  London
Branch, Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken  AB (publ), HSBC  Bank plc, ING Bank N.V.,
London Branch, Danmarks Skibskredit A/S and The Korea  Development  Bank as
mandated lead arrangers and DVB Bank America N.V. as arranger with Nordea Bank AB,
London Branch as agent and security  agent.(5)*

Facilities Agreement dated February 20,  2019, relating to $450,000,000 Revolving Credit
Facility among GAS-three Ltd., GAS-four Ltd., GAS-five  Ltd., Gas-sixteen Ltd.,
GAS-seventeen Ltd., as borrowers, Credit Suisse AG, Nordea Bank  Abp, Filial  I Norge,
The IyoBank, Ltd. Singapore Branch as the Original  Lenders  with Nordea Bank Abp,
Filial I Norge as agent and the security agent, and Credit  Suisse  AG  as mandated  lead
arranger, global co-ordinator and bookrunner,  guaranteed by GasLog Partners LP and
GasLog Partners Holdings LLC. (6)*

4.13 Exchange Agreement among GasLog  Partners LP, GasLog Partners GP LLC  and

GasLog Ltd. dated June 24, 2019; please see  ‘‘Item 7. Major  Shareholders and Related
Party  Transactions—B. Related Party  Transactions—Exchange  Agreement’’(7)

4.14

4.15

Facility Agreement dated June  25, 2019,  relating to $130,000,000  Term Loan Facility among
GasLog Hellas-1 Special Maritime Enterprise as  Borrower, ABN Amro  Bank N.V. and
Oversea-Chinese Banking Corporation  Limited as mandated lead arrangers and ABN Amro
Bank N.V. as agent and the security agent; please see ‘‘Item  5. Operating and Financial
Review and Prospects—B. Liquidity and Capital Resources—Credit Facilities’’**

Form of Corporate Guarantee between  GasLog Ltd. and ABN Amro Bank N.V. (provided
in respect of the GasLog Warsaw Facility, dated June 25,  2019);  please  see ‘‘Item 5.
Operating and Financial Review and Prospects—B. Liquidity and Capital  Resources—
Credit Facilities’’**

157

Exhibit No.

4.16

Description

Facility Agreement dated December 12, 2019, relating to $1,052,791,260  Loan  Facilities
among GAS-twenty eight Ltd.; GAS-thirty Ltd., GAS-thirty one Ltd., GAS-thirty  two Ltd.,
GAS-thirty three Ltd., GAS-thirty four Ltd.,  and  GAS-thirty  five  Ltd.,  as borrowers,
Citibank, N.A. London Branch, DNB (UK) Ltd., Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken  AB
(publ), Bank of America National Association, Commonwealth Bank of Australia, KfW
IPEX-Bank GmbH, National Australia Bank Limited, Oversea-Chinese Banking
Corporation Limited, Societe Generale, London Branch,  Standard Chartered Bank,  BNP
Paribas Seoul Branch and The Korea Development Bank as Mandated  Lead Arrangers;
Citibank, N.A. London Branch, DNB (UK) Ltd., Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken  AB
(publ), KfW IPEX-Bank GmbH, National Australia Bank  Limited,  Oversea-Chinese
Banking Corporation Limited, Societe Generale,  London Branch,  Standard Chartered
Bank, BNP Paribas Seoul Branch and  The  Korea Development Bank as bookrunners;  DNB
Bank ASA, London Branch as Agent and security agent; Citibank N.A.,  London Branch  as
ECA Agent and ECA Co-ordinator; Citibank N.A. London Branch and DNB  (UK) Ltd., as
Global Co-ordinators and GasLog Ltd., GasLog Carriers Ltd.,  GasLog Partners LP and
GasLog Partners Holdings LLC as Guarantors; please see ‘‘Item  5. Operating and Financial
Review and Prospects—B. Liquidity and Capital Resources—Credit Facilities’’(8)**

4.17 Registration Rights Agreement among GasLog  Ltd. and the shareholders named  therein,

dated as of June 22, 2020; please see ‘‘Item 7.  Major Shareholders and Related Party
Transactions—B. Related Party Transactions—Registration Rights  Agreement’’(9)

4.18

4.19

4.20

Facility Agreement dated July  16, 2020, relating to $576,887,500 loan facility  among
GAS-one Ltd., GAS-two Ltd., GAS-six Ltd.,  GAS-nine Ltd.,  GAS-ten Ltd.  and
GAS-eighteen Ltd. as borrowers, ABN Amro Bank  N.V.,  Citigroup Global Markets
Limited, Nordea Bank ABP, Filial I Norge and HSBC Bank PLC  as mandated  lead
arrangers and Credit Agricole Corporate and Investment  Bank, Unicredit Bank AG and
National Australia Bank Limited as arrangers,  with ABN Amro  Bank N.V. as  agent  and
security agent and ABN Amro Bank N.V.,  Citigroup Global Markets Limited  and Nordea
Bank ABO, Filial I Norge as bookrunners, guaranteed by GasLog Ltd., GasLog
Carriers Ltd., GasLog Partners LP and GasLog Partners Holdings LLC; please  see ‘‘Item 5.
Operating and Financial Review and Prospects—B. Liquidity and Capital  Resources—
Credit Facilities’’ **(10)

Facility Agreement dated July  16, 2020, relating to $260,331,250 loan facility  among
GAS-twenty Ltd., GAS-seven Ltd. and GAS-eight Ltd., as borrowers,  BNP Paribas  and
Credit Suisse AG, as mandated lead arrangers,  with BNP Paribas  as agent and security
agent and Credit Suisse AG as global  co-ordinator and bookrunner, guaranteed  by  GasLog
Partners LP and GasLog Partners Holdings LLC; please see ‘‘Item  5. Operating and
Financial Review and Prospects—B. Liquidity  and Capital  Resources—Credit
Facilities’’ **(11)

Facility Agreement dated July  16, 2020, relating to $200,000,000 loan facility  among
GAS-twenty seven Ltd., GAS-twenty one Ltd. and GAS-nineteen Ltd., as borrowers,  DNB
(UK) Ltd. and ING Bank N.V., London Branch, as  mandated lead arrangers, with  DNB
Bank ASA, London Branch as agent  and security agent, DNB (UK)  Ltd.  and ING
Bank N.V., London Branch as bookrunners and ING Bank N.V, London Branch  as
structuring and documentation bank,  guaranteed by GasLog Partners LP,  GasLog Partners
Holdings LLC, GasLog Ltd. and GasLog Carriers Ltd.; please  see ‘‘Item 5.  Operating and
Financial Review and Prospects—B. Liquidity  and Capital  Resources—Credit
Facilities’’ **(11)

158

Exhibit No.

4.21

Description

Facility Agreement dated July  30, 2020, relating to a  $96,800,000 loan facility among
GAS-fifteen Ltd. as Borrower and National Bank of Greece S.A. as Arranger, Agent and
Security Agent, guaranteed by GasLog Ltd. and  GasLog  Carriers Ltd.; please see ‘‘Item  5.
Operating and Financial Review and Prospects—B. Liquidity and Capital  Resources—
Credit Facilities’’. **

4.22 Agreement and Plan of Merger dated February 21, 2021 among  GasLog Ltd., GEPIF III

Crown Bidco L.P. and GEPIF III Crown MergerCo Limited see  Item  7. Major
Shareholders and Related Party Transactions—B. Related Party  Transactions—Merger  and
Rollover Agreements’’(12)

4.23 Rollover Agreement dated February  21, 2021  among  GasLog Ltd., GEPIF III Crown

Bidco L.P. and the Rolling Shareholders see Item 7. Major  Shareholders and Related Party
Transactions—B. Related Party Transactions—Merger and Rollover Agreements’’(12)

8.1 List of Subsidiaries of GasLog Ltd.

12.1 Rule 13a-14(a)/15d-14(a) Certification of GasLog Ltd.’s Chief Executive Officer

12.2 Rule 13a-14(a)/15d-14(a) Certification of GasLog Ltd.’s Chief Financial Officer

13.1 GasLog Ltd. Certification of Paul Wogan, Chief Executive Officer, pursuant to 18 U.S.C.
Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of  the U.S. Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

13.2 GasLog Ltd. Certification of Achilleas  Tasioulas,  Chief Financial  Officer, pursuant to 18

U.S.C.  Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section  906 of the U.S. Sarbanes-Oxley  Act  of
2002

23.1 Consent of Deloitte LLP

101.INS XBRL Instance Document

101.SCH XBRL Taxonomy Extension  Scheme

101.CAL XBRL Taxonomy Extension Scheme  Calculation Linkbase

101.DEF XBRL Taxonomy Extension Scheme  Definition Linkbase

101.LAB XBRL Taxonomy Extension Scheme Label Linkbase

101.PRE XBRL Taxonomy Extension Scheme  Presentation Linkbase

(1)

(2)

(3)

(4)

(5)

(6)

(7)

Previously filed as an exhibit to GasLog Ltd.’s Registration Statement on Form F-1 (File No. 333-179034), declared
effective  by the SEC on March 29, 2012, and hereby incorporated  by reference to such Registration Statement.

Previously filed as an exhibit to GasLog Ltd.’s Report on Form 6-K (File No. 001-35466), filed with the SEC on May 24,
2013, and  hereby incorporated by reference to such Report.

Previously filed as an exhibit to GasLog Ltd.’s Registration Statement on Form S-8 (File No. 333-187020), filed with the
SEC on  March 4, 2013, or an amendment thereto,  and  hereby incorporated by reference to such Registration Statement.

Previously filed as an exhibit to GasLog Ltd.’s Annual Report on Form 20-F (File No. 001-35466), filed with the SEC on
March 14, 2016, and hereby incorporated by reference to such Report.

Previously filed as an exhibit to GasLog Ltd.’s Report on Form 6-K (File No. 001-35466), filed with the SEC on August 4,
2016, and  hereby incorporated by reference to such Report.

Previously filed as an exhibit to GasLog Partners LP’s Annual Report on Form 20-F (File No. 001-36433), filed with the
SEC on  February 26, 2019, and hereby incorporated  by reference to such Report.

Previously filed as Exhibit 10.1 to GasLog Partners LP’s Report on Form 6-K (File No. 001-36433), filed with the SEC on
June 24, 2019, and hereby incorporated by reference to such Report.

159

(8)

(9)

(10)

(11)

(12)

*

**

Previously filed as an exhibit to GasLog Partners LP’s Annual Report on Form 20-F (File No. 001-36433), filed with the
SEC on  March 3, 2020, and hereby incorporated  by reference to such Report.

Previously filed as an exhibit to GasLog Ltd.’s Report on Form 6-K (File No. 001-35466), filed with the SEC on June 29,
2020, and  hereby incorporated by reference to such Report.

Previously filed as an exhibit to GasLog Ltd.’s Report on Form 6-K (File No. 001-35466), filed with the SEC on August 5,
2020, and  hereby incorporated by reference to such Report.

Previously filed as Exhibit 10.1 to GasLog Partners LP’s Report on Form 6-K (File No. 001-36433), filed with the SEC on
August  5, 2020, and hereby incorporated by reference to such Report.

Previously filed as an exhibit to GasLog Ltd.’s Report on Form 6-K (File No. 001-35466), filed with the SEC on March 3,
2021, and  hereby incorporated by reference to such Report.

Confidential material has been redacted and complete  exhibits have been separately filed with the SEC.

Certain  schedules have been omitted. The registrant hereby undertakes to furnish supplemental copies of any of the
omitted schedules upon request by the SEC, provided, however,  that GasLog may request confidential treatment pursuant
to Rule 24b-2 of the Exchange Act for any schedule  so furnished.

The  registrant hereby agrees to furnish to the SEC upon request  a copy of any instrument relating to long-term debt that
does not exceed 10% of the total assets of the Company and its subsidiaries.

160

The registrant hereby certifies that it  meets  all of the  requirements for filing on  Form 20-F and

that it has duly caused and authorized  the undersigned to sign this annual report on its behalf.

SIGNATURE

GASLOG LTD.,

By /s/ PAUL A. WOGAN

Name: Paul A. Wogan
Title: Chief Executive Officer

Dated: March 5, 2021

161

GASLOG LTD.
INDEX TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting  Firm—Deloitte LLP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Consolidated statements of financial  position as of December 31,  2019 and 2020 . . . . . . . . . . . .
Consolidated statements of profit or  loss  for  the years ended December  31, 2018,  2019 and 2020
Consolidated statements of comprehensive  income or loss  for the  years  ended December 31,

Page

F-2
F-5
F-6

2018, 2019 and 2020 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

F-7

Consolidated statements of changes in  equity for the years ended December 31, 2018, 2019 and

F-8
2020 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Consolidated statements of cash flows  for  the years ended December  31, 2018,  2019 and 2020 . .
F-9
Notes to the consolidated financial statements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . F-10

F-1

REPORT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM

To the shareholders and the Board of Directors of GasLog Ltd.

Opinion on the Financial Statements

We have audited the accompanying consolidated statements of financial position of GasLog Ltd. and
subsidiaries (the ‘‘Company’’) as of December 31, 2019 and 2020, the related  consolidated  statements
of profit or loss, comprehensive income or loss, changes in equity, and cash flows for each of the
three years in the period ended December 31, 2020, and the related notes (collectively referred to as
the ‘‘financial statements’’). In our opinion, the financial statements present fairly, in all material
respects, the financial position of the Company as of December 31, 2019 and 2020, and the results of
its operations and its cash flows for each of the three years in the period ended December 31, 2020, in
conformity with International Financial Reporting Standards as issued by the International Accounting
Standards Board.

We have also audited, in accordance with the standards of the Public Company Accounting Oversight
Board (United States) (PCAOB), the Company’s internal control over financial reporting as of
December 31, 2020, based on criteria  established in  Internal Control—Integrated Framework (2013)
issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission and our report
dated March 5, 2021, expressed an unqualified opinion on the Company’s internal control over
financial reporting.

Basis for Opinion

These financial statements are the responsibility of the Company’s management. Our responsibility is to
express an opinion on the Company’s financial statements based on our audits. We are a public
accounting firm registered with the PCAOB and are required to be independent with respect to the
Company in accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and the applicable rules and regulations of
the Securities and Exchange Commission and the PCAOB.

We  conducted our audits in accordance  with the standards  of  the PCAOB. Those standards require
that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial
statements are free of material misstatement, whether due to error or fraud. Our audits included
performing procedures to assess the risks of material misstatement of the financial statements, whether
due to error or fraud, and performing procedures that respond to those risks. Such procedures included
examining, on a test basis, evidence regarding the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements.
Our audits also included evaluating the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by
management, as well as evaluating the overall presentation of the financial statements. We believe that
our  audits provide a reasonable basis  for  our opinion.

Critical Audit Matter

The critical audit matter communicated below is a matter arising from the current-period audit of the
financial statements that was communicated or required to be communicated to the audit committee
and that (1) relates to accounts or disclosures that are material to the financial statements and
(2) involved our especially challenging, subjective, or complex judgments. The communication of critical
audit matters does not alter in any way our opinion on the financial statements, taken as a whole, and
we are not, by communicating the critical audit matter below, providing a separate opinion on the
critical audit matter or on the accounts or disclosures to which it relates.

F-2

Tangible fixed assets—Impairment of vessels—Refer  to Notes 2 and 6 to  the  financial statements

Critical Audit Matter Description

The carrying value of vessels as of December 31, 2020, was $5,001.2 million, net of  an impairment loss
of $28.6 million recognized in 2020.

The Company’s vessels are evaluated for impairment when events or changes in circumstances indicate
that the carrying value may not be recoverable, and conversely for reversal of impairment. For each
vessel for which impairment indicators or impairment reversal indicators are identified, management
estimates the recoverable amount, which is the higher of fair value less cost to sell and value in use,
and compares it to the carrying value. The Company assesses value in use using discounted future cash
flows, which requires management to make estimates and assumptions, the most significant of which
are charter rates for non-contracted revenue days and the discount rate. Management identifies these
as key assumptions to which the outcome of the impairment assessment is most sensitive.

At each reporting date, the Company reassesses its impairment assumptions and revises them as
appropriate, including in the current year for the impact of COVID-19. In its impairment assessments
during 2020, the Company revised certain assumptions for charter rates for the period up to June 30,
2025 and its assumptions for discount rates, whilst its longer term charter rate assumptions were
unchanged. For Steam vessels, management’s assumptions for charter rates for non-contracted revenue
days decreased from an average of $41 thousand per day to $40 thousand per day compared to 2019,
and management’s average discount rate assumption decreased to 6.4%, resulting in further impairment
losses of $28.6 million recognized on five of the Company’s six Steam vessels during 2020. The
estimated recoverable amount of all other vessels for which impairment indicators were identified
exceeded their carrying value as of December 31, 2020 and, therefore, no impairment was recognized
for the remaining vessels.

We identified impairment of vessels as a critical audit matter because of the significant judgments made
by management to estimate the discount rate and the charter rates for non-contracted revenue days,
which are particularly subjective as they involve assumptions about the LNG shipping market through
the end of the useful lives of the vessels, and due to the sensitivity of the value in use calculations to
management’s assumptions. Performing audit procedures to evaluate the reasonableness of
management’s estimates of charter rates for non-contracted revenue days and the discount rate
required a high degree of auditor judgment.

How the Critical Audit Matter Was Addressed in the Audit

Our audit procedures related to the charter rate assumptions for non-contracted revenue days and the
discount rate used by management to estimate the recoverable amount of vessels included the
following:

(cid:127) We tested the controls over management’s estimation of the recoverable amount of vessels for which
impairment indicators were identified, including controls over the assumptions for the charter rate
for non-contracted revenue days and  the discount rate.

(cid:127) With the assistance of our fair value specialists, we evaluated the reasonableness of the discount rate,

including: management’s estimation method; testing the source information underlying the
determination of the discount rate; the mathematical accuracy of the discount rate calculation; and
developing a range of independent estimates and comparing those to the discount rate selected by
management.

(cid:127) We evaluated the reasonableness of charter rates for non-contracted revenue days up to June 30,

2025 by comparing management’s assumptions for each vessel type to market data, and considered
actual time charters agreed with charterers for similar vessels.

F-3

(cid:127) We evaluated the reasonableness of management’s charter rate assumptions from July 1, 2025

through the end of each vessel’s useful life for which very limited observable market data is available,
by evaluating management’s rationale and evidence for these assumptions, as follows:

– We re-assessed the rationale and evidence for the estimated long run costs of building and

financing newbuild LNG vessels and the differential between the longer term charter rates for
each vessel type assumed by management, including comparison to historic new build prices,
comparison of the differentials to actual charter rates and to market data available about nearer
term charter rates, with particular focus on the charter rate differentials between Steam and
non-Steam vessels.

– We compared them with management’s assumptions for the period up to June 30, 2025 for

which market data was available, and assessed the reasonableness of the changes in
management’s charter rate assumptions over the forecast period in light of evidence gathered
about the potential future evolution of the LNG shipping market, including forecasts and reports
published by external industry experts.

– We considered new evidence arising between Q4 2019 and Q4 2020 in our evaluation of

management’s assumption that the long term charter rates for each vessel type has not changed
since the prior year impairment assessment.

(cid:127) In addition to our evaluation of management’s charter rate assumptions from July 1, 2025 through
the end of each vessel’s useful life (which were held constant as described above) we compared
management’s current assumptions for the charter rate for non-contracted revenue days prior to
July 1, 2025 against management’s previous assumptions, and evaluated the rationale and evidence
for changes in those assumptions based on observable trends in the LNG shipping market.

(cid:127) We also considered other relevant evidence, including shipbrokers’ estimates of market values of
Steam vessels that were lower than management’s estimates of values in use as of December 31,
2020.

(cid:127) We tested the mathematical accuracy of management’s value in use calculations, and agreed the

inputs to the source information and underlying assumptions used by management.

(cid:127) We assessed the sensitivity disclosures in Note 6 based on our own sensitivity analysis, and checked

management’s calculations of those sensitivities.

(cid:127) We evaluated management’s ability to accurately forecast by comparing actual results to

management’s historical forecasts.

Deloitte LLP

London, United Kingdom

March 5,  2021

We  have served as the Company’s auditor since  2014.

F-4

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Consolidated statements of financial position
As  of December 31, 2019 and 2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars)

Note

December 31,
2019

December 31,
2020

Assets
Non-current assets
Goodwill
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Investment in associates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Deferred financing  costs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Other non-current assets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Derivative financial instruments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Tangible fixed assets
Vessels under construction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Right-of-use assets

Total non-current  assets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Current assets
Trade and other receivables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Dividends receivable and other amounts  due from related  parties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Derivative financial instruments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Inventories . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Prepayments and other current assets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Short-term investments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Cash and cash equivalents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Total current assets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Total assets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Equity and liabilities
Equity
Preference shares . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Share capital
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Contributed surplus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Reserves . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Treasury shares . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Accumulated deficit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Equity attributable to owners of the  Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Non-controlling interests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Total equity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Current liabilities
Trade accounts payable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Ship management creditors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Amounts due to related parties
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Derivative financial instruments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Other payables and accruals
Borrowings, current  portion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Lease liability, current  portion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Total current liabilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Non-current liabilities
Derivative financial instruments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Borrowings, non-current portion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Lease liability, non-current  portion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Other non-current liabilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Total non-current  liabilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Total equity and liabilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

3
5

10
26
6
6
7

9
21
26

10

8

11
11
11
12
11

4

8
21
26
14
13
7

26
13
7

9,511
21,620
11,592
24,221
3,572
4,427,065
203,323
206,495

4,907,399

24,900
573
429
8,172
13,475
4,500
263,747

315,796

9,511
21,759
5,150
12,463
5,561
5,028,509
132,839
203,437

5,419,229

36,223
1,259
534
7,564
24,685
—
367,269

437,534

5,223,195

5,856,763

46
810
760,671
16,799
(2,159)
(87,832)

688,335
961,518

46
954
759,822
18,667
(1,340)
(132,780)

645,369
951,768

1,649,853

1,597,137

27,615
601
200
8,095
136,242
255,422
9,363

437,538

41,837
2,891,973
195,567
6,427

3,135,804

5,223,195

25,046
397
164
35,415
143,057
245,626
9,644

459,349

78,440
3,527,595
186,526
7,716

3,800,277

5,856,763

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial  statements.

F-5

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Consolidated statements of profit or loss
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except per  share data)

Revenues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Net pool allocation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Voyage expenses and commissions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Vessel operating and supervision costs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Depreciation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Impairment loss on vessels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Loss on disposal of non-current assets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
General and administrative expenses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Profit from operations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Financial costs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Financial income . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Loss on derivatives . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Share of profit of associates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Notes

2018

2019

2020

18
18
16
15
6,7
6
6
17

19
19
26
5

618,344
17,818
(20,374)
(128,084)
(153,193)

668,637
(4,264)
(23,772)
(139,662)
(168,041)
— (162,149)
—
—
(47,385)
(41,993)

674,089
—
(21,883)
(148,235)
(177,213)
(28,627)
(572)
(47,249)

292,518

123,364

250,310

(166,627)
4,784
(6,077)
1,800

(190,481)
5,318
(55,441)
1,627

(165,281)
726
(84,658)
2,192

Total  other expenses, net . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

(166,120)

(238,977)

(247,021)

Profit/(loss) for the year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

126,398

(115,613)

3,289

Attributable to:
Owners of the Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Non-controlling interests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

47,683
78,715

(100,661)
(14,952)

(44,948)
48,237

126,398

(115,613)

3,289

Earnings/(loss) per share—basic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Earnings/(loss) per share—diluted . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

29
29

0.47
0.46

(1.37)
(1.37)

(0.63)
(0.63)

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these  consolidated financial  statements.

F-6

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Consolidated statements of comprehensive income or loss
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars)

Profit/(loss) for the year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Other comprehensive loss:
Items that may not be reclassified subsequently to profit or loss:
Actuarial (loss)/gain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Items that may be reclassified subsequently to profit or loss:
Effective portion of changes in fair value of  cash flow hedges, net
of amounts recycled to profit or loss . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Recycled loss of cash flow hedges reclassified to profit  or loss . . .

Other comprehensive loss for the year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Note

2018

2019

2020

126,398

(115,613)

3,289

(51)

—

57

26
26

(258)
—

(309)

(2,933)
697

(2,236)

(750)
—

(693)

Total  comprehensive income/(loss) for the year . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

126,089

(117,849)

2,596

Attributable to:
Owners of the Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Non-controlling interests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

47,374
78,715

(102,897)
(14,952)

(45,641)
48,237

126,089

(117,849)

2,596

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial  statements.

F-7

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Consolidated statements of changes  in equity
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars)

Share
capital
(Note 11)

Preference Contributed

shares
(Note 11)

surplus
(Note 11)

Reserves
(Note 12)

Treasury
shares
(Note 11)

(Accumulated
deficit)/
Retained
earnings

Attributable
to owners
of the Group

Non-
controlling
interests
(Note 4)

Total

Balance as of December 31, 2017 .
Opening  adjustment(1)
.

.

.

.

.

.

.

Balance as of January 1, 2018 .

.

.
.

.

Net  proceeds  from GasLog Partners’
.
.

public  offerings  (Note 4) .
Other  equity  related costs .
.
Dividend  paid  (common and

.
.

.
.

.
.

preference  shares) (Note 12) .
Share-based  compensation, net of
accrued  dividend  (Note 22)

.

.

.

.

.

.
.

.

.
.

.

.

.
.

.

.
.

.

.

Settlement  of  share-based
.
.
.

compensation .
.
.
Treasury shares, net
.
.
Profit for the year .
Other comprehensive loss for the year .

.
.
.

.
.
.

.
.
.

.
.
.

.
.
.

.
.
.

.
.
.

.
.
.

.
.
.

Total comprehensive (loss)/income for
.
.
.

the year

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

Balance as of December 31,  2018 .

Opening adjustment(2)

.

.

.

.

.

.

Balance as of January 1, 2019 .

Other  equity related costs .
.
Dividend paid (common and

.

.

.

.

.

preference shares) (Note 12) .
Share-based compensation, net of
accrued  dividend (Note 22)

.

.

.

.

.

.

Settlement of share-based
.

compensation .

.
Treasury shares, net or GasLog
.
Partners’ common units .
.
.

.
.
.
Loss for the year .
Other  comprehensive loss for the year .

.

.

.
.

.
.

.
.

.
.

.
.

.

.

.

.

.

Total comprehensive loss for the year .

Balance as of December 31,  2019 .

.

.

Proceeds from private placement, net
.
.

.
Equity offering costs .
.
Dividend declared (common and

of offering costs (Note 11) .
.

.
.

.
.

.

.

.

.

.

.
.

preference  shares) (Notes 4 and 12) .

Share-based compensation, net of
accrued  dividend (Note 22)

.

.

.

.

.

Settlement of share-based
.

compensation .

.
Treasury shares, net  or GasLog
.
Partners’ common units .
.
.

.
(Loss)/profit for the  year
.
Other comprehensive loss for  the year .

.

.

.
.

.
.

.
.

.
.

.
.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

810
—

810

—
—

—

—

—
—
—
—

—

810

—

810

—

—

—

—

—
—
—

—

810

144
—

—

—

—

—
—
—

Total comprehensive (loss)/income for
.
.
.

the year

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

Balance as of December 31, 2020 .

.

.

.

.

—

954

46
—

46

—
—

—

—

—
—
—
—

—

46

—

46

—

—

—

—

—
—
—

—

46

—
—

—

—

—

—
—
—

—

46

(5,980)
190

(5,790)

—
—

918,029
(246)

917,783

845,105
—

1,763,134
(246)

845,105

1,762,888

—
(395)

267,514
—

267,514
(395)

(29,279)

(90,074)

(87,954)

(178,028)

—

4,434

—

4,434

—
—
47,683
—

47,683

12,614

215

12,829

—

—

—

—

682
(62)
47,683
(309)

—
—
78,715
—

682
(62)
126,398
(309)

47,374

78,715

126,089

879,742

1,103,380

1,983,122

215

128

343

879,957

1,103,508

1,983,465

(595)

(22)

(617)

(89,310)

(104,126)

(193,436)

4,794

138

—

—

4,794

138

911,766
—

911,766

—
(395)

(60,795)

—

—
—
—
—

—

18,347
(436)

17,911

(6,960)
—

(6,960)

—
—

—

4,434

(3,074)
—
—
(309)

—
—

—

—

3,756
(62)
—
—

(309)

—

850,576

18,962

(3,266)

—

—

—

850,576

18,962

(3,266)

—

—

4,794

—

—

—

(4,721)

4,859

(595)

(89,310)

—

—

—
—
—

—

—
—
(2,236)

(2,236)

(3,752)
—
—

—
(100,661)
—

(3,752)
(100,661)
(2,236)

(22,890)
(14,952)
—

(26,642)
(115,613)
(2,236)

—

(100,661)

(102,897)

(14,952)

(117,849)

760,671

16,799

(2,159)

(87,832)

688,335

961,518

1,649,853

34,849
—

(35,698)

—

—

—
—
—

—

—
—

—

5,385

—
—

—

—

(2,824)

2,819

—
—

—

—

—

—
—
(693)

(2,000)
—
—

—
(44,948)
—

34,993
—

—
(132)

34,993
(132)

(35,698)

(56,859)

(92,557)

5,385

(5)

(2,000)
(44,948)
(693)

—

—

(996)
48,237
—

5,385

(5)

(2,996)
3,289
(693)

(693)

—

(44,948)

(45,641)

48,237

2,596

759,822

18,667

(1,340)

(132,780)

645,369

951,768

1,597,137

(1)

(2)

Adjusted so as to reflect certain amendments introduced due to the adoption of IFRS 15 Revenue from Contracts with
Customers and IFRS 9 Financial Instruments, which became effective on January 1, 2018.

Restated so as to reflect an adjustment introduced due to the adoption of IFRS 16 Leases on January 1, 2019.

The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial  statements.

F-8

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Consolidated statements of cash flows
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars)

.

.

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.
.

Cash flows from operating activities:
Profit/(loss) for the year
.
Adjustments for:
.
.
.
.
Depreciation .
.
.
Impairment loss on vessels .
.
.
.
Loss on disposal of non-current assets
.
.
.
.
Share of profit of associates .
.
.
.
.
.
Financial income .
.
Financial costs
.
.
.
.
.
.
Unrealized foreign exchange losses on cash  and cash equivalents .
.
.
.
.
Realized foreign exchange losses .
Unrealized loss on derivative financial instruments held  for trading  including  ineffective  portion of  cash  flow
.
.
.
.
.
.

.
.
.
Recycled loss of cash flow hedges reclassified to profit or loss
.
Non-cash defined benefit obligations
.
.
Share-based compensation .

hedges .

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Movements in operating assets and liabilities:
(Increase)/decrease in trade and other receivables including related  parties, net .
.
Decrease/(increase) in prepayments and other assets .
.
.
(Increase)/decrease in inventories .
.
.
.
(Increase)/decrease in other non-current assets .
.
Increase in other non-current liabilities .
.
.
.
Increase in accounts payable  and other current liabilities

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Cash provided by operations .

Interest paid .

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Net cash provided by operating activities .

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.

.

Cash flows from investing activities:
Payments for tangible fixed assets and vessels under construction .
.
Proceeds from sale of tangible fixed assets .
.
.
.
.
.
Return of capital expenditures .
.
.
.
.
Other investments
.
.
.
.
.
Payments for right-of-use assets .
.
.
.
Dividends received from associate .
.
.
.
Purchase of short-term investments .
.
.
.
Maturity of short-term investments
.
.
.
.
Increase in restricted cash .
.
.
.
.
Financial income received .

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Net cash used in investing  activities .

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Cash flows from financing activities:
.
.
.
.
.
.
Proceeds from loans and bonds
.
.
.
.
Loan and bond repayments
.
.
.
.
.
.
Payment of loan and bond issuance costs .
.
Loan issuance costs received .
.
.
.
.
Proceeds from GasLog Partners’ common  unit offerings  (net of  underwriting  discounts  and  commissions)
.
Proceeds from GasLog Partners’ preference  unit offerings  (net of  underwriting  discounts and  commissions) .
.
.
.
.
Payment of equity raising  costs
.
Proceeds from private placement
.
.
.
.
Payment for cross currency swaps’ (‘‘CCSs’’) termination/modification .
.
.
.
Payment for bond repurchase at a premium .
.
.
.
Payment  for interest rate swaps termination .
.
.
Proceeds from entering into  interest rate swaps
.
.
.
Purchase of treasury shares or GasLog  Partners’ common units .
.
.
.
Proceeds from stock options’ exercise .
.
.
.
.
Dividends paid .
.
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.
.
Payments for lease liability .

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Net cash provided by financing activities .

.

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.

.

Effects of exchange rate changes on cash and cash equivalents .
(Decrease)/increase in cash and cash equivalents
.
.
Cash and cash equivalents, beginning of the year

.
.

.
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.

Cash and cash equivalents, end  of the year .

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Non-cash investing and financing activities
Capital expenditures included in liabilities at the end of the year .
.
Capital expenditures included in liabilities at the end of the year—Right-of-use  assets .
.
Equity raising costs included  in liabilities at the end of the  year
.
Loan issuance costs included in liabilities at the end of the year
.
Dividend declared included in liabilities at the end of the year .
.
.
Liabilities related to leases at the end of  the year

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Notes

2018

2019

2020

6
6
5
19
19

26
26

5

5, 21

126,398

(115,613)

3,289

153,193
—
—
(1,800)
(4,784)
166,627
329
—

8,211
—
(51)
5,216

168,041
162,149
—
(1,627)
(5,318)
190,481
—
773

54,201
697
—
5,447

177,213
28,627
572
(2,192)
(726)
165,281
—
—

64,367
—
57
5,849

453,339

459,231

442,337

(33,286)
888
(915)
(465)
2,957
3,113

27,609
205
(419)
(21,678)
864
23,436

(11,361)
(20,910)
607
11,758
375
21,678

425,631

489,248

444,484

(141,921)

(171,825)

(155,533)

283,710

317,423

288,951

(673,787)
—
—
(136)
(36)
1,263
(71,000)
46,000
—
4,697

(479,618)
—
10,451
(158)
(935)
1,313
(82,500)
103,000
—
5,469

(732,385)
2,322
—
(472)
(5,803)
1,725
—
4,500
(300)
844

(692,999)

(442,978)

(729,569)

524,165
(231,753)
(7,449)
—
60,345
208,394
(917)
—
—
—
—
—
(62)
754
(178,028)
(7,329)

905,730
(547,751)
(25,912)
—
—
—
(1,670)
—
(3,731)
(46,721)
—
—
(26,642)
149
(193,436)
(9,950)

2,138,035
(1,481,709)
(35,795)
792
—
—
(1,153)
36,000
(4,052)
(1,937)
(31,662)
31,622
(2,996)
—
(90,041)
(11,150)

368,120

50,066

545,954

(329)
(41,498)
384,092

(3,358)
(78,847)
342,594

342,594

263,747

(1,814)
103,522
263,747

367,269

27

19,989
107
1,067
407
—
287

18,976
173
14
1,317
—
228

15,273
169
—
320
2,516
3

.

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The accompanying notes are an integral part of these consolidated financial  statements.

F-9

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

1. Organization and Operations

GasLog Ltd. (‘‘GasLog’’) was incorporated  in Bermuda on July 16, 2003.  GasLog and its
subsidiaries (the ‘‘Group’’) are primarily engaged  in the ownership, operation and management  of
vessels in the liquefied natural gas (‘‘LNG’’) market, providing maritime  services for  the transportation
of LNG on a worldwide basis and LNG  vessel management  services. The Group conducts its operations
through its vessel-owning subsidiaries and  through  its  vessel management services subsidiary. The
Group’s operations are carried out from offices in  Piraeus, London and Singapore. The registered
office of GasLog is Clarendon House,  2 Church Street, Hamilton  HM 11, Bermuda.  GasLog’s
chairman, Peter G. Livanos, is GasLog’s largest shareholder  through his  ownership  of  Ceres
Shipping Ltd. (‘‘Ceres Shipping’’), which controls Blenheim Holdings Ltd. (‘‘Blenheim Holdings’’). As
of December 31, 2020, entities controlled by  members  of the Livanos  family, including GasLog’s
chairman, are deemed to beneficially  own  approximately 41.4% of  GasLog’s issued  and outstanding
common shares. As a result of his ownership  of GasLog’s common shares, Mr. Livanos can effectively
control the outcome of most matters on  which GasLog’s shareholders are entitled  to  vote.

On May 12, 2014, GasLog Partners LP (‘‘GasLog Partners’’ or the ‘‘Partnership’’), a subsidiary of
GasLog, completed its initial public offering (the ‘‘GasLog Partners’ IPO’’) with the sale and  issuance
of 9,660,000 common units (including 1,260,000  units in  relation  to  the overallotment  option exercised
in full by the underwriters), resulting in  net proceeds  of  $186,029 and  representing a 48.2%  ownership
interest. Concurrently with the GasLog  Partners’ IPO,  the Partnership  acquired from  GasLog  a 100%
ownership interest in GAS-three Ltd.,  GAS-four Ltd.  and GAS-five Ltd., the  entities that own the
GasLog Shanghai, the GasLog Santiago and the GasLog Sydney, in exchange for (i) 162,358 common
units and 9,822,358 subordinated units  issued  to  GasLog  representing  a 49.8% ownership interest and
all of the incentive distribution rights  that entitle GasLog to  increasing percentages  of  the cash  that  the
Partnership distributes in excess of $0.43125 per unit per quarter, (ii) 400,913  general partner units
issued to GasLog Partners GP LLC (the ‘‘general  partner’’), a wholly  owned subsidiary  of GasLog,
representing a 2.0% general partner  interest and (iii) $65,695 of cash consideration paid directly  to
GasLog from the GasLog Partners’ IPO proceeds.

Since GasLog Partners’ IPO, the Partnership acquired 100%  of the ownership interests in  the

following GasLog subsidiaries that own  the vessels listed below:

Date Acquisition Completed

Subsidiaries Acquired

Vessels Purchased

September 29, 2014 . . . . . . . . . GAS-sixteen Ltd. and

GAS-seventeen Ltd.
July 1, 2015 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . GAS-nineteen Ltd.,

GAS-twenty Ltd. and
GAS-twenty one Ltd.

November 1, 2016 . . . . . . . . . . . GAS-seven Ltd.
May 3, 2017 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . GAS-eleven Ltd.
July 3, 2017 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . GAS-thirteen Ltd.
October 20, 2017 . . . . . . . . . . . GAS-eight Ltd.
April 26, 2018 . . . . . . . . . . . . . GAS-fourteen Ltd.
November 14, 2018 . . . . . . . . . . GAS-twenty seven Ltd.
April 1, 2019 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . GAS-twelve Ltd.

Methane Rita Andrea and
Methane Jane Elizabeth
Methane Alison Victoria,
Methane Shirley Elisabeth and
Methane Heather Sally
GasLog Seattle
GasLog Greece
GasLog Geneva
Solaris
GasLog Gibraltar
Methane Becki Anne
GasLog Glasgow

F-10

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

1. Organization and Operations (Continued)

As of December 31, 2020, GasLog holds a 35.3% ownership interest  (including the 2% interest

through general partner units) in GasLog Partners and, as a result of its ownership  of  the general
partner and the fact that the general partner  elects  the majority of the  Partnership’s directors  in
accordance with the Partnership Agreement,  GasLog has  the ability to control the Partnership’s  affairs
and policies. Consequently, GasLog Partners is consolidated in  the Group’s financial statements.

The accompanying consolidated financial statements include the financial statements of GasLog
and its subsidiaries. Unless indicated otherwise, the subsidiaries listed below  were 100% held (either
directly or indirectly) by GasLog. As of  December 31, 2020, the Group’s structure is  as follows:

Name

Subsidiaries:
GasLog Investments Ltd.
GasLog Carriers Ltd.

(‘‘GasLog Carriers’’) .

.

.

.

GasLog Shipping
Company Ltd.

.
GasLog Partners GP LLC .
GasLog Cyprus

.

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.
.

Investments Ltd.

.
GasLog Services UK Ltd.
.
GasLog Services US Inc.
GasLog Asia Pte Ltd.
.
.
GasLog LNG Services Ltd.
.
GasLog Monaco S.A.M.
.
.
GAS-Two Panama S.A.
.
.
.
.
GAS-one Ltd.
.
.
.
.
GAS-two Ltd.
.
.
.
.
GAS-six Ltd.
.
.
.
.
GAS-nine Ltd.
.
.
.
.
GAS-ten Ltd.
.
.
.
.
.
GAS-fifteen Ltd.
.
.
GAS-eighteen Ltd.
.
.
.
.
.
GAS-twenty two Ltd.
.
.
GAS-twenty three Ltd.
.
.
GAS-twenty four Ltd.
.
.
GAS-twenty five Ltd.
.
.
GAS-twenty six Ltd.
.
.
GAS-twenty eight Ltd.
.
.
GAS-twenty nine Ltd.
.
.
GAS-thirty Ltd.
.
.
.
.
GAS-thirty one Ltd.
.
.
GAS-thirty two Ltd.
.
.
GAS-thirty three Ltd.
.
.
GAS-thirty four Ltd.
.
.
GAS-thirty five Ltd.
.
.
.
GAS-thirty six Ltd.
GAS-thirty seven Ltd.
.
.
GasLog Hellas-1 Special
Maritime Enterprise .
.
35.3% interest subsidiaries:
GasLog Partners LP .
.
GasLog Partners
Holdings LLC .
.
.
.
.
.

GAS-three Ltd.
GAS-four Ltd.
GAS-five Ltd.
.
GAS-seven Ltd.
GAS-eight Ltd.
GAS-eleven Ltd.

.
.
.
.
.
.
.

.
.
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.
.
.

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.
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.
.

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.

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.

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.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.

.

.

.
.
.
.
.
.
.

Place of
incorporation

Date of
incorporation

Principal activities

BVI

July  2003

Holding  company

Bermuda

February  2008

Holding company

Bermuda
Marshall Islands

January  2006
January  2014

Holding company
Holding company

Cyprus
England  and Wales
Delaware
Singapore
Bermuda
Monaco
Panama
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda

December 2016
May  2014
May 2014
May 2015
August 2004
February 2010
November 2020
February 2008
February  2008
February  2011
June 2011
June 2011
August  2013
January 2014
May 2014
May 2014
June 2014
June 2014
January 2015
September 2016
September 2016
December 2017
December 2017
December 2017
May 2018
May 2018
December  2018
December  2018
December  2018

Holding company
Service company
Service  company
Service company
Vessel  management services
Service  company
Dormant
Vessel-owning company
Vessel-owning  company
Vessel-owning  company
Vessel-owning  company
Vessel-owning  company
Vessel-owning  company
Vessel-owning company
Vessel-owning  company
Vessel-owning company
Vessel-owning company
Lease asset  company
Lease  asset company
Vessel-owning  company
Dormant(2)
Vessel-owning  company
Vessel-owning company
Vessel-owning company
Vessel-owning company
Vessel-owning  company
Vessel-owning  company
Dormant
Dormant

Cargo
capacity
Cubic
meters
(‘‘cbm’’)

—

—

—
—

—
—
—
—
—
—
—
155,000
155,000
155,000
155,000
155,000
153,600
145,000
174,000
174,000
174,000
174,000
170,000
180,000
—
180,000
180,000
174,000
174,000
180,000
180,000
—
—

Vessel

Delivery date

—

—

—
—

—
—
—
—
—
—
—
GasLog Savannah
GasLog Singapore
GasLog Skagen
GasLog Saratoga
GasLog Salem
GasLog Chelsea
Methane  Lydon Volney
GasLog Genoa
GasLog Gladstone
GasLog Houston
GasLog Hong Kong
Methane  Julia  Louise
GasLog Windsor
—
GasLog Westminster
GasLog Wales
GasLog Georgetown
GasLog Galveston
Hull No. 2311
Hull  No.  2312
—
—

—

—

—
—

—
—
—
—
—
—
—
May 2010
July 2010
July 2013
December 2014
April  2015
October 2013
April 2014
March  2018
March  2019
January  2018
March  2018
March  2015
April  2020
—
July 2020
May 2020
November 2020
January 4, 2021
Q2 2021(1)
Q3 2021(1)
—
—

Greece

June 2019

Vessel-owning company

180,000

GasLog  Warsaw(2)

July 2019

Marshall Islands

January 2014

Holding  company

—

—

—

Marshall Islands
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda

April  2014
April 2010
April 2010
February 2011
March 2011
March 2011
December  2012

Holding  company
Vessel-owning  company
Vessel-owning  company
Vessel-owning company
Vessel-owning  company
Vessel-owning  company
Vessel-owning  company

—
155,000
155,000
155,000
155,000
155,000
174,000

—
GasLog Shanghai
GasLog Santiago
GasLog Sydney
GasLog Seattle
Solaris
GasLog Greece

—
January 2013
March  2013
May 2013
December 2013
June  2014
March  2016

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F-11

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

1. Organization and Operations (Continued)

Name

Place of
incorporation

Date of
incorporation

Principal activities

Vessel-owning  company
Vessel-owning company
Vessel-owning company
Vessel-owning company
Vessel-owning  company
Vessel-owning  company
Vessel-owning  company
Vessel-owning  company
Vessel-owning company

Cargo
capacity
Cubic
meters
(‘‘cbm’’)

Vessel

Delivery date

GasLog Glasgow
174,000
GasLog Geneva
174,000
GasLog Gibraltar
174,000
Methane  Rita  Andrea
145,000
Methane  Jane Elizabeth
145,000
145,000
Methane  Alison Victoria
145,000 Methane  Shirley Elisabeth
145,000
170,000

Methane  Heather Sally
Methane  Becki Anne

June  2016
September 2016
October 2016
April  2014
April  2014
June  2014
June  2014
June  2014
March  2015

Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda

December 2012
July 2013
July 2013
January 2014
January 2014
April 2014
April 2014
April 2014
January  2015

Bermuda

May 2010

Vessel-owning  company

145,000

Methane  Nile  Eagle

December 2007

Greece

June 2010

Service  company

—

—

—

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GAS-twelve Ltd.
.
GAS-thirteen Ltd.
.
GAS-fourteen Ltd.
.
GAS-sixteen Ltd.
.
.
GAS-seventeen Ltd.
.
.
GAS-nineteen Ltd.
.
GAS-twenty Ltd.
.
GAS-twenty one Ltd.
.
GAS-twenty seven Ltd.
25% interest associate:
Egypt LNG Shipping Ltd.
20% interest associate:
Gastrade S.A. (‘‘Gastrade’’)

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(1)

(2)

For newbuildings, expected delivery quarters as of December 31,  2020  are  presented.

In June 2019, the newbuilding GasLog Warsaw, delivered on July 31,  2019, was  transferred  from GAS-twenty  nine Ltd.  to  the  subsidiary  GasLog
Hellas-1 Special Maritime Enterprise.

On October 1, 2015, GasLog Carriers,  Dynagas Ltd.  (‘‘Dynagas’’) and Golar LNG Ltd.  (‘‘Golar’’)

(‘‘Pool Owners’’) and The Cool Pool Limited signed  an LNG  carrier pooling agreement (the ‘‘LNG
Carrier Pool’’ or ‘‘Pool Agreement’’ or ‘‘Cool  Pool’’)  to  market  their vessels  operating in  the LNG
shipping spot market. For the operation  of the  Cool Pool,  a  Marshall Islands service company named
‘‘The Cool Pool Limited’’ or the ‘‘Pool Manager’’, was incorporated in September 2015  acting  as an
agent. In June and July 2018, Dynagas  removed its three  vessels from the Cool Pool and ceased to be a
shareholder.

On June 6, 2019, GasLog entered into a  termination  agreement with  the Cool Pool, whereby
GasLog would assume commercial control of its six vessels operating in the LNG carrier spot market
through the Cool Pool and on June 28, 2019,  GasLog transferred to Golar its 100 shares of the
common capital stock of The Cool Pool Limited. Following expiry of their  commitments,  GasLog
vessels were withdrawn from the Cool Pool in  June and July 2019.

All entities in the Group have a December  31st  year end.  During 2020, the Group employed an

average of 176 employees (2019: 163 and  2018:  172).

GasLog’s common shares are traded  on the New York  Stock Exchange  (‘‘NYSE’’) under the ticker

symbol ‘‘GLOG’’. GasLog’s 8.75% Series  A  Cumulative  Redeemable Perpetual Preference Shares
(‘‘Preference Shares’’) are traded on  the NYSE under the ticker symbol ‘‘GLOG PR A’’.

2. Significant Accounting Policies

Statement of compliance

The consolidated financial statements  of GasLog  and its subsidiaries have been prepared in

accordance with International Financial Reporting  Standards (the ‘‘IFRS’’) as  issued by the
International Accounting Standards Board (the ‘‘IASB’’).

F-12

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

2. Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

Basis of preparation and approval

The consolidated financial statements  have been prepared on the  historical  cost basis,  except for
the revaluation of  derivative financial  instruments  that are  measured at fair values at  the end of each
reporting period, as explained in the  accounting policies below. Historical cost is generally based on  the
fair value of the consideration given  in  exchange  for goods and services.

Going concern

In considering going concern management has  reviewed the Group’s  future cash requirements,
covenant compliance and earnings projections, incorporating  the negative impact of the  COVID-19
pandemic on near-term market rates. As  of  December  31, 2020, the  Group’s current  assets totaled
$437,534, while current liabilities totaled $459,349,  resulting in  a  negative working capital position of
$21,815. Current liabilities include $59,612 of  unearned revenue in relation to hires received in  advance
of December 31, 2020 (which represents  a non-cash liability that  will be recognized  as revenue  in
January as the services are rendered).

Management monitors the Company’s liquidity position throughout  the year  to  ensure that it has

access to sufficient funds to meet its  forecast cash requirements, including newbuilding and debt service
commitments, and to monitor compliance with the financial  covenants  within its loan  and bond
facilities. Taking into account the volatile  commercial and financial  market conditions  experienced
throughout 2020, management anticipates  that our  primary  sources of  funds over the next twelve
months will be available cash, cash from operations  and  existing borrowings, including the credit
agreements entered into on July 16, 2020 and July 30, 2020, which refinanced in full  the debt  maturities
due in 2021, as well as the sale and leaseback transactions we concluded in October 2020 and January
2021 that released incremental liquidity  of $61,224.  Management  believes that these anticipated sources
of funds will be sufficient for the Company to meet its liquidity needs and  to  comply with  its banking
covenants for at least twelve months  from the date  of  this report and therefore it is appropriate to
prepare the financial statements on a  going concern basis.  Additionally, the Company  may enter into
new debt facilities in the future, as well  as equity or debt instruments,  although there  can be no
assurance that the  Company will be able to obtain  additional  debt or equity financing on  terms
acceptable to the Company, which will  also depend on  financial, commercial and  other factors, as  well
as a significant recovery in capital market conditions and a sustainable  improvement of the LNG
charter market, that are beyond the Company’s control. The Company’s long-term ability to repay  its
debts and maintain compliance with its debt covenants  for at least twelve months from the  date of this
report without reliance on additional  sources of finance is also dependent on a  sustainable  longer-term
recovery in the LNG charter market  from the  market  disruption observed in  2020 as a  result of the
COVID-19 outbreak. Finally, our 8.875% senior unsecured notes due in 2022 (the ‘‘8.875% Senior
Notes’’) will mature on March 22, 2022 (Note 13), which we plan to refinance in due course.

The financial statements are expressed in U.S. dollars (‘‘USD’’), which  is the functional  currency  of

the Group’s subsidiaries because their  vessels  operate in international shipping markets in which
revenues and expenses are primarily settled in USD, and the Group’s  most significant assets and
liabilities are paid for and settled in USD.

F-13

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

2. Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

On March 5, 2021, the financial statements were authorized on behalf of GasLog’s board of

directors for issuance and filing.

The principal accounting policies are set out  below.

Basis of consolidation

The consolidated financial statements  incorporate the financial statements of GasLog and entities

controlled by GasLog (its subsidiaries). Control is  achieved where GasLog:

(cid:127) has power over the investee;

(cid:127) is exposed, or has rights, to variable returns from  its  involvement with  the investee; and

(cid:127) has the ability to use its power to  affect  its  returns.

Income and expenses of subsidiaries  acquired or  disposed of during  the year are included in the
consolidated financial statements from  the date control is  obtained and  up to the date  control ceases.
Acquisitions of businesses are accounted  for  using  the acquisition method.

All intra-group transactions, balances,  income  and expenses are eliminated in full on consolidation.

The other investors in subsidiaries in  which the  Group has less than 100% interest hold a

non-controlling interest in the net assets  of these subsidiaries. Non-controlling interest is  stated at the
non-controlling interest’s proportion  of  the net assets  of the subsidiaries where the Group has less than
100% interest. Subsequent to initial recognition the carrying  amount  of  non-controlling interest is
increased or decreased by the non-controlling interest’s share  of subsequent changes in  the equity of
such subsidiaries. Total comprehensive income is  attributed  to  a  non-controlling  interest  even if this
results in  the non-controlling interest  having a deficit balance.

Changes in the Group’s ownership interests  in subsidiaries that  do not result in the Group losing

control over the subsidiaries are accounted for as equity transactions. The carrying  amounts of the
Group’s interests and the non-controlling interests are adjusted  to  reflect the changes in  their  relative
interests in the subsidiaries. Any difference  between the amount by which  the non-controlling interests
are adjusted and the fair value of the  consideration paid or received  is recognized  directly  in equity and
attributed to owners of the Group.

Goodwill

Goodwill arising in a business combination  is recognized  as an asset at the  date that control is
acquired (the acquisition date). Goodwill  is measured  as the excess of the sum of  the consideration
transferred, the amount of any non-controlling interests in the  acquiree, and the  fair value  of the
acquirer’s previously held equity interest in the  acquiree  (if any)  over the net of  the acquisition-date
fair value of the identifiable assets acquired and the liabilities  assumed. If, after  reassessment, the
Group’s interest in the fair value of the  acquiree’s  identifiable net  assets exceeds the sum of the
consideration transferred, the amount  of  any non-controlling interests in  the acquiree  and the  fair value
of the acquirer’s previously held equity  interest in the acquiree (if any), the excess is recognized
immediately in the consolidated statement  of  profit or  loss  as a bargain purchase gain.

F-14

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

2. Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

Goodwill is not amortized but is reviewed for impairment at  least annually. For the purpose of

impairment testing, goodwill is allocated to each of the  Group’s cash-generating units expected  to
benefit from the synergies of the combination. Cash-generating units to which goodwill  has been
allocated are tested for impairment annually, or more frequently when there is an indication that the
unit may be impaired. If the recoverable  amount of the  cash-generating unit  is less than  its  carrying
amount, the impairment loss is allocated  first to reduce the carrying  amount  of  any goodwill allocated
to the unit and then to the other assets of the unit pro-rata on the  basis of the  carrying amount of each
asset in the unit. An impairment loss  recognized for goodwill is not reversed in a subsequent period.

On disposal of a subsidiary, the attributable amount of  goodwill  is included in the determination of

the profit or loss on disposal.

Investment in associates

An associate is an entity over which the Group  has significant influence and  that  is neither a

subsidiary nor an interest in a joint venture. Significant influence is the power to participate in the
financial and operating policy decisions  of the investee but is not control or joint  control over those
policies.

The results, assets and liabilities of associates are included in these financial statements using the
equity method of accounting, except when the  investment is classified as held for sale,  in which case  it
is accounted for under IFRS 5  Non-current Assets Held for Sale and Discontinued Operations. An
impairment assessment of investments in associates is  performed  when there  is an indication that the
asset has been impaired or the impairment  losses  recognized in prior  years no longer  exist.

When the Group’s share of losses exceeds  the carrying amount of the investment, the investment is

reported at nil value and recognition  of losses is discontinued except to the extent  of the Group’s
commitment.

Investment in joint ventures

A joint arrangement is an arrangement  where two or  more parties  have joint  control. Joint control

is established by a contractual arrangement that requires unanimous agreement on decisions made on
relevant activities. Without the presence  of  joint  control, joint arrangements do  not  exist.

Under IFRS 11  Joint Arrangements, investments in joint arrangements are classified as either joint

operations or joint ventures. The classification depends on the  contractual rights and obligations of
each  investor, rather than the legal structure of the joint arrangement. The  arrangement is a  joint
operation when the contractual agreement provides rights  to assets and  obligations for liabilities for
those parties sharing joint control. The  joint arrangement  is a joint venture when  the agreement grants
rights to the arrangement’s net assets.  The Cool Pool was a  joint venture until June 2019  when a
termination agreement was entered between  GasLog and the  Cool Pool. Interests in joint  ventures are
accounted for using the equity method (see Investment in associates above), after  initially  being
recognized at cost in the consolidated statement of  financial position.

F-15

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

2. Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

Leases

Lease income from operating leases of vessels where the Group is a  lessor is  recognized in profit

or loss on a straight-line basis over the lease term. The  respective leased  assets are included in  the
statement of financial position based on their  nature under ‘‘Tangible  fixed  assets’’. The Group  did not
need to make any adjustments to the  accounting for assets held as  lessor  as a result of adopting the
new leasing standard.

The Group has changed its accounting  policy for leases  where  the  Group is  the lessee. The new

policy and the impact of the change are  discussed below.

Until December 31, 2018, leases of property, plant and equipment (i.e. vessels) where  the Group,

as lessee, had substantially all the risks  and  rewards of ownership  were classified as finance leases.
Finance leases were capitalized at the  lease’s inception at the fair value  of the leased property or,  if
lower, the present value of the minimum lease payments, discounted at the interest rate implicit in the
lease, if practicable, or else at the Group’s  incremental borrowing rate. The corresponding rental
obligations, net of finance charges, were  included  in current  and non-current liabilities as  finance lease
liabilities. Each lease payment was allocated between the  liability  and finance cost.  The finance cost was
charged to profit or loss over the lease period so as to produce a  constant periodic rate of interest on
the remaining balance of the liability for  each period. The property, plant  and equipment  acquired
under finance leases was depreciated  over the  asset’s useful  life or over  the shorter of the asset’s  useful
life and the lease term if there was no reasonable certainty that  the  Group would  obtain  ownership  at
the end of the lease term. In addition, leases in which a  significant portion of the risks and rewards of
ownership were not transferred to the Group as lessee  were  classified  as operating leases (i.e. vessels’
equipment, properties and other). Payments made under operating leases (net of any incentives
received from the lessor) were charged to profit  or loss on a  straight-line basis over the period of the
lease.

From January 1, 2019 and onwards, each of the above leases  is recognized  as a right-of-use asset,

with a corresponding liability recognized at the date at  which the  leased asset  is available for use by the
Group. The Group is a lessee under a  vessel sale and  leaseback arrangement  and also leases various
properties, vessel and office equipment.  Rental contracts  are typically made for  fixed  periods but may
have extension options. Lease terms are negotiated on an individual basis and contain a wide range of
different terms and conditions. Following  the implementation of IFRS 16, leases are recognized  as a
right-of-use asset and a corresponding  liability at the date at which the leased asset is available for  use
by the Group. The corresponding rental obligations, net of finance charges, are included in current and
non-current liabilities as lease liabilities.  Each lease payment  is allocated between the liability and
finance cost. The lease liability is subsequently measured by increasing the carrying amount to reflect
interest on the lease liability (using the effective interest rate method) and by reducing the carrying
amount to reflect lease payment made. The  finance cost is charged to profit or  loss over  the lease
period so as to produce a constant periodic rate of  interest on the remaining balance of the  liability  for
each  period. The right-of-use asset is depreciated over the  shorter  of  the asset’s  useful life  and the
lease term on a straight-line basis.

Assets  and liabilities arising from a lease are initially  measured on a present value basis. Lease

liabilities include the net present value  of the  following  lease payments: (a) fixed payments (including

F-16

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

2. Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

in-substance fixed payments), less any  lease incentives receivable, (b) variable lease payments that are
based on an index or a rate (if any), (c)  amounts expected to be payable  by  the lessee under residual
value guarantees (if any), (d) the exercise  price of  a purchase option  if the lessee is reasonably  certain
to exercise that option, and (e) payments of  penalties  for  terminating the  lease, if  the lease term
reflects the lessee exercising that option.  The  lease payments are discounted  using  the interest rate
implicit in the lease, if that rate can  be  determined, or  the Group’s incremental borrowing rate, which
is the Group’s current average borrowing  rate. Right-of-use assets  are measured  at cost comprising  the
following: (a) the amount of the initial  measurement  of lease liability, (b) any  lease payments  made at
or before the commencement date less any lease incentives received, (c) any initial  direct costs, and
(d) restoration costs. The right-of-use  asset is  depreciated over  its useful life or  over the shorter of its
useful life and the lease term if there is  no  reasonable certainty that the  Group will obtain ownership
at the end of the lease term. Payments  associated with short-term leases and  leases of low-value assets
are recognized on a straight-line basis as  an expense in profit or loss.  Short-term  leases are leases  with
a lease term of 12 months or less. Low-value items comprise of low value vessel or  office equipment.

Deferral and presentation of government grants

Government grants relating to costs are  deferred and recognized  in the  profit or loss over the
period necessary to match them with  the costs that they  are intended to compensate. Government
grants relating to income are included in non-current liabilities as deferred income and are credited to
profit or loss  on a straight-line basis as costs are incurred over  the  duration of  the specific  project.

Accounting for (i) revenues and related operating expenses  and  (ii) voyage expenses and commissions

The Group’s revenues comprise revenues from time charters for the charter hire  of its  vessels,
gross  pool revenues (until July 2019), management fees, project supervision income and  other  income
earned during the period in accordance with existing contracts.

A time charter represents a contract entered into for the  use of a vessel  for a  specific period of

time and a specified daily charter hire  rate. Time charter revenue is recognized as earned on a
straight-line basis over the term of the  relevant  time charter starting from the  vessel’s delivery to the
charterer. Except for the off-hire period,  when a  charter  agreement exists, the  vessel  is made available
and services are provided to the charterer  and collection of the related revenue is  reasonably assured.
Unearned revenue includes cash received prior to the balance sheet date relating  to  services  to  be
rendered after the balance sheet date. Accrued revenue  represents  income recognized  in advance as a
result of the straight-line revenue recognition in  respect of charter agreements that provide  for varying
charter rates.

Under a time charter arrangement, the hire  rate per the charter  agreement has  two components:
the lease component and the service component relating to the vessel  operating costs. The  revenue in
relation to the lease component of the agreements is  accounted for  under  IFRS 16  Leases. The revenue
in relation to the service component  relates to vessel operating expenses, which  include expenses  that
are paid by the vessel owner such as  management fees, crew wages, provisions and  stores, technical
maintenance and insurance expenses. These costs are essential to operating a charter and the
charterers receive the benefit of these  when the  vessel  is used during  the contracted time and,

F-17

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

2. Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

therefore, these costs are accounted  for in  accordance with the  requirements of  IFRS 15 Revenue from
Contracts with Customers.

Pool revenues were recognized on a gross basis representing time charter revenues  earned by

GasLog vessels participating in the pool under charter  agreements where GasLog contracts directly
with charterers. Revenues were recognized  on a  monthly basis, when the vessel is  made available and
services are provided to the charterer during  the period, the amount can  be  estimated  reliably and
collection of the related revenue is reasonably assured.

Revenue from vessel management and vessel construction  project supervision contracts is

recognized when earned and when it is  probable  that future  economic benefits will flow to the Group
and  such a benefit can be measured reliably.

Time charter hires received in advance  are  classified  as liabilities until the criteria for recognizing

the revenue as earned are met.

Under a  time charter arrangement, the vessel operating expenses such as management  fees,  crew
wages, provisions and stores, technical  maintenance  and insurance expenses and  broker’s commissions
are paid by the vessel owner, whereas voyage expenses  such as bunkers, port  expenses, agents’  fees  and
extra war risk insurance are paid by the charterer.

Management believes that mobilization  of  a  vessel from a previous port of discharge to a

subsequent port of loading does not  result in a separate benefit for charterers and that the activity  is
thus incapable of being distinct. This activity is  considered to be a required set-up  activity to fulfill  the
contract. Consequently, positioning and repositioning fees and associated  expenses should be
recognized over the period of the contract  to  match  the recognition  of  the respective  hire revenues
realized,  and  not at a certain  point in  time  following the  adoption  of  IFRS 15 Revenue from Contracts
with Customers. All other voyage expenses and vessel operating costs are expensed as incurred, with the
exception of commissions, which are also recognized on a pro-rata basis over the duration of the period
of the time charter. Bunkers’ consumption included  in voyage expenses  represents mainly bunkers
consumed during vessels’ unemployment and off-hire.

Net pool allocation

In relation to the vessels’ participation in the  Cool Pool  (until  July  2019), net  pool allocation
represents GasLog’s share of the net revenues earned  from the other pool  participants’  vessels less the
other participants’ share of the net revenues earned by  GasLog’s vessels included in the pool.  Each
participant’s share of the net pool revenues is  based on  the number  of  pool points  attributable to its
vessels and the number of days such  vessels participated in  the pool.

Financial income and costs

Interest income is  recognized on an accrual  basis. Dividend income is recognized when  the right to

receive payment is established.

Interest expense, other borrowing costs and realized loss on CCSs are recognized  on an  accrual

basis.

F-18

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

2. Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

Foreign currencies

Transactions in currencies other than  the USD are recognized at the rates of exchange prevailing

at the dates of the transactions. At the  end of each reporting  period,  monetary assets and  liabilities
denominated in other currencies are retranslated into USD at  the rates prevailing at that date.  All
resulting exchange differences are recognized  in the consolidated statement of profit or loss in the
period in which they arise. The exchange differences from  cash and bonds  are classified in  Financial
costs, while all other foreign exchange  differences  are classified in General and  administrative expenses.

Deferred financing costs for undrawn facilities

Commitment, arrangement, structuring, legal and agency fees incurred for  obtaining  new loans  or
refinancing existing facilities are recorded as  deferred loan issuance costs and classified contra to debt,
while the fees incurred for the undrawn facilities are classified under  non-current assets  in the
statement of financial position and are  reclassified contra to debt on the drawdown dates.

Deferred financing costs are deferred  and amortized  to  financial costs over the  term of the

relevant loan, using the effective interest method. When the relevant loan  is terminated or
extinguished, the unamortized loan fees  are written-off in the consolidated statement of profit  or loss.

Vessels under construction

Vessels under construction are presented at  cost less identified impairment  losses, if any.  Costs

include shipyard installment payments  and  other  vessel  costs incurred  during the construction period
that are directly attributable to the acquisition  or construction of the vessels.

Upon completion of the construction, the vessels are  presented on the  statement  of  financial

position in accordance with the ‘‘Tangible fixed assets: Property, plant and  equipment’’ policy as
described below.

Tangible fixed assets: Property, plant and  equipment

Tangible fixed assets are stated at cost less accumulated depreciation and  any accumulated
impairment loss. The initial cost of an asset  comprises its  purchase price and any  directly attributable
costs of bringing the asset to its working  condition. The cost of an LNG vessel is split  into  two
components, a ‘‘vessel component’’ and  a ‘‘dry-docking component’’. Depreciation for the vessel
component is calculated on a straight-line basis, after taking into account  the estimated residual values,
over the estimated useful life of this  major component of the vessels. Residual  values are based on
management’s estimation about the amount  that the Group  would currently obtain from disposal  of its
vessels, after deducting the estimated  costs of disposal, if  the vessels were  already of the age and  in the
condition expected at the end of their  useful life.

The LNG vessels are required to undergo dry-docking overhaul every  five  years  to  restore their

service potential and to meet their classification requirements that  cannot be performed while  the
vessels are operating. The dry-docking component is  estimated at the  time of  a vessel’s delivery from
the shipyard or acquisition from the previous owner  and is  measured based  on the  estimated  cost of
the first dry-docking subsequent to its  acquisition,  based on  the Group’s historical experience with

F-19

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

2. Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

similar types of vessels. For subsequent  dry-dockings,  actual costs are capitalized when incurred. The
dry-docking component is depreciated  over  the period  of  five  years  in case of new vessels, and until the
next dry-docking for secondhand vessels (which is performed within five years from the  vessel’s  last
dry-docking).

Costs that will be capitalized as part  of the  future dry-dockings will include a variety of costs
incurred directly attributable to the dry-dock and costs incurred  to  meet  classification  and regulatory
requirements, as well as expenses related  to  the dock preparation and port  expenses at the dry-dock
shipyard, dry-docking shipyard expenses,  expenses related  to hull,  external surfaces and decks, and
expenses related to machinery and engines of the vessel, as well as  expenses related to the testing and
correction of findings related to safety  equipment on board.  Dry-docking costs do not include vessel
operating expenses such as replacement  parts,  crew expenses, provisions,  lubricants consumption,
insurance, management fees or management  costs during the  dry-docking period. Expenses related  to
regular maintenance and repairs of vessels are expensed as incurred,  even if  such maintenance  and
repair occurs during the same time period as  dry-docking.

The expected useful lives of all long-lived assets are as  follows:

Vessel

LNG vessel component . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Dry-docking component . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Furniture, computer, software and other office  equipment . .
Leasehold improvements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

35  years
5  years
3 - 5 years
12  years (or remaining term of the lease)

Management estimates the useful life of its vessels to be 35 years from the  date of initial delivery
from the shipyard. Secondhand vessels  are depreciated  from  the date of their acquisition through their
remaining estimated useful life.

The useful lives of all assets and the depreciation method  are reviewed annually  to  ensure that the
method and period of depreciation are  consistent  with the expected pattern  of economic benefits from
items of property, plant and equipment. The residual value is also reviewed  at each financial
period-end. If expectations differ from previous estimates, the  changes are accounted  for prospectively
in profit or loss in the period of the  change and  future  periods.

Management estimates residual value  of its  vessels  to  be  equal to the product of its lightweight
tonnage (‘‘LWT’’) and an estimated scrap  rate per LWT. The  estimated  residual value of the vessels
may not represent  the fair market value  at any time partly because market prices of scrap values tend
to fluctuate. The Group might revise  the  estimate of the residual  values of  the vessels in the  future in
response to changing market conditions.

Ordinary maintenance and repairs that do not extend the useful  life  of the asset  are expensed as

incurred.

When assets are sold, they are derecognized and any gain or loss  resulting from their disposal  is

included in profit or loss.

F-20

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

2. Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

Impairment of tangible fixed assets, vessels under construction and vessel held under finance lease renamed to
right-of-use assets

All assets are reviewed for impairment whenever events  or changes in  circumstances indicate that

the carrying amount of an asset may not  be  recoverable. Whenever the  carrying amount of an asset
exceeds its recoverable amount, an impairment loss is recognized in the  consolidated  statement  of
profit or loss. The recoverable amount is  the  higher of an  asset’s fair value less cost of disposal  and
‘‘value in use’’. The fair value less cost of  disposal is the  amount  obtainable from the  sale of  an asset in
an arm’s length transaction less the costs of disposal, while ‘‘value in use’’ is the  present  value of
estimated future cash flows expected  to  arise from  the continuing use  of  an asset and from its disposal
at the end of its useful life. Recoverable  amounts  are estimated for individual assets or, if it is not
possible, for the cash-generating unit. Each vessel is  considered to be a separate cash-generating  unit.
The fair values of the vessels are estimated from  market-based  evidence  by  appraisal that is normally
undertaken by professionally qualified  brokers.

Reimbursable capital expenditures

Costs eligible for capitalization that are contractually reimbursable  by our  charterers  are

recognized on a gross basis in the period incurred under ‘‘Vessels’’. Concurrently,  an equal amount is
deferred as a liability and amortized  to  profit or loss as income over the remaining tenure of the
charter party agreement.

Provisions

Provisions are recognized when the Group  has a present obligation  (legal or constructive) as  a
result of a past event, it is probable that  the Group  will be required to settle the obligation,  and a
reliable estimate can be made of the amount of the obligation.  The amount recognized  as a provision is
the best estimate of the consideration required to settle  the present obligation at  the end of the
reporting period, taking into account  the risks  and  uncertainties  surrounding the obligation.  Where a
provision  is measured using the cash  flows  estimated  to  settle  the present obligation, its carrying
amount is the present value of those cash flows. When some  or all of the  economic benefits  required to
settle a provision are expected to be  recovered  from a third party, a receivable is  recognized as  an asset
if it  is  virtually certain that reimbursement will be received and the amount of the receivable  can be
measured reliably.

Inventories

Inventories represent lubricants on board  the vessel  and,  in the event  of a vessel not being

employed under a charter, the bunkers  on  board  the vessel. Inventories  are stated at the lower of  cost
calculated on a first in, first out basis,  and  net realizable  value.

Financial instruments

Financial assets and liabilities are recognized when the  Group becomes a party to the contractual
provisions of the instrument. All financial  instruments are initially recognized  at fair  value. Transaction
costs that are directly attributable to  the acquisition or issue of financial assets and financial liabilities

F-21

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

2. Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

(other than financial assets and financial liabilities  at fair value  through profit or loss)  are added to or
deducted from the fair value of the financial assets  or financial liabilities, as  appropriate,  on initial
recognition.

(cid:127) Cash and cash equivalents

Cash and cash equivalents includes cash on hand, deposits  held at  call with  financial  institutions
and other short-term, highly liquid investments which are  readily convertible  into  known  amounts
of cash with original maturities of three months or less at  the time of purchase that are subject  to
an insignificant risk of change in value.

(cid:127) Restricted cash

Restricted cash comprises cash held that is  not  available for  use by the Group including  cash held
in blocked accounts in order to comply  with the  covenants under the Group’s  credit facilities and
amounts held as guarantees as part of  stand-by letters of credit.

(cid:127) Short-term investments

Short-term investments represent short-term, highly liquid time deposits placed with financial
institutions which are readily convertible into known  amounts of cash  with original maturities  of
more than three months but less than 12 months  at the  time  of  purchase  that  are subject to an
insignificant risk of change in value.

(cid:127) Trade receivables

Trade receivables are carried at the amount  expected to be received from  the third  party to settle
the obligation. At  each reporting date, all potentially uncollectible accounts are assessed
individually for purposes of determining the appropriate  allowance for doubtful  accounts. Trade
receivables are recognized initially at their  transaction price  and  subsequently measured  at
amortized cost using the effective interest  method. Trade receivables are written off when there is
no reasonable expectation of recovery. See Note  9 for further  information about the  Group’s
accounting for trade receivables.

The simplified approach is applied to trade  and  other  receivables and the Group  recognizes
lifetime expected credit losses (‘‘ECLs’’) on trade receivables. Under  the simplified  approach, the
loss allowance is always equal to ECLs.

(cid:127) Borrowings

Borrowings are initially recognized at fair value (net of transaction costs).  Borrowings are
subsequently measured at amortized  cost, using  the effective interest rate method. Any difference
between the proceeds (net of transaction costs)  and the  settlement of the borrowings  is recognized
in the statement of profit or loss over  the term of the borrowings.

Borrowings are classified as current liabilities  unless the Group has an  unconditional right to defer
settlement of the liability for at least  12  months after  the reporting period.

Borrowings also include arrangements such as  sale and leaseback transactions with  a right or
obligation to repurchase the asset. The Group continues to  recognize the asset and  a financial
liability for the amount of the consideration  received from the customer.

F-22

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

2. Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

(cid:127) Derivative financial instruments

The Group enters into a variety of derivative financial instruments to economically hedge  its
exposure to interest rate and foreign  exchange rate risks, including  interest rate swaps, CCSs and
forward foreign exchange contracts.

Derivative financial instruments are initially recognized at fair value  on the date the derivative
contracts are entered into and are subsequently remeasured to their fair  value at each reporting
date.  The resulting changes in fair value are  recognized in the consolidated statement of profit  or
loss immediately unless the derivative is designated and effective  as a hedging  instrument, in  which
event the timing of the recognition in the  consolidated  statement  of profit or  loss depends on the
nature of the hedge relationship. Derivatives are presented as assets when  their  valuation is
favorable to the Group and as liabilities when unfavorable to the Group.

The Group’s criteria for classifying a  derivative instrument  in a  hedging relationship include:
(1) the existence of an economic relationship between the  hedged item and the  hedging instrument
(i.e., the hedging instrument and hedged item must, based on an economic rationale, be expected
to move in opposite directions as a result of a change in  the hedged risk); (2)  the effect of the
credit risk should not dominate the value  changes of either the hedged item or the hedging
instrument (i.e., credit risk can arise on both the  hedging instrument and the  hedged item  in the
form of the counterparty’s credit risk  or the  entity’s own credit risk); and (3) the  hedge  ratio
(i.e., the ratio between the amount of hedged item  and  the amount of hedging instrument)  of  the
hedging relationship is the same as that actually used in the  economic hedge.

At inception of the hedge relationship, the Group documents  the  economic relationship between
hedging instruments and hedged items, including whether  changes  in the  cash flows of the  hedging
instruments are expected to offset changes  in the cash flows  of hedged items. The Group
documents its risk management objective and strategy for undertaking  its hedge transactions.

Cash flow hedges that qualify for hedge accounting

The effective portion of changes in the fair value of derivatives that are designated  and qualify as
cash flow hedges is recognized in other comprehensive income. The gain or  loss relating to the
ineffective portion is recognized immediately in  the consolidated  statement  of profit or  loss.
Amounts previously recognized in other comprehensive income  and accumulated  in equity are
reclassified to the consolidated statement of profit or loss in the  periods when the hedged  item
affects profit or loss, in the same line item as the recognized hedged item. Hedge accounting  is
discontinued when the Group terminates the hedging  relationship, when the hedging instrument
expires or is sold, terminated or exercised,  or when it  no longer  qualifies for  hedge accounting.

Any gain or loss accumulated in equity at that time remains in equity  and  is recognized in the
consolidated statement of profit or loss  when the hedged  item  affects the consolidated statement
of profit or loss. When a forecast transaction  designated as  the hedged item in a cash flow hedge
is no longer expected to occur, the gain or  loss accumulated in  equity is  recycled immediately  to
the consolidated statement of profit or loss.

F-23

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

2. Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

In accordance with the transition provisions,  the Group has  adopted the  amendments to IFRS  9
Financial Instruments and IFRS 7 Financial Instruments: Disclosures which provide certain reliefs in
connection with interest rate benchmark reform, retrospectively to hedging relationships  that existed
at the start of the reporting period or were designated thereafter. The amendments  provide
temporary relief from applying specific hedge accounting requirements to  hedging relationships
directly affected by interbank offered  rate  (‘‘IBOR’’)  reform. The reliefs have the effect that IBOR
reform should not generally cause hedge  accounting to terminate. However, any hedge
ineffectiveness should continue to be recorded in  the income statement.  The reliefs will cease to
apply  when the uncertainty arising from interest rate benchmark reform  is no longer present. The
Group uses CCSs  in order to hedge the Group’s  exposure to fluctuations  deriving from its bonds
(Note 26). The amendments permit continuation of hedge accounting even though  there is
uncertainty about the replacement of  the floating interest rates included  in its CCSs (Note 24).

Derivatives that do not qualify for hedge  accounting

Certain derivative instruments do not  qualify for hedge accounting. Changes in the  fair value  of
any derivative instrument that does not  qualify for hedge accounting are recognized  immediately in
the consolidated statement of profit or loss.

(cid:127) Lease liabilities

Lease liabilities are initially measured  at the  fair value of the leased property or,  if lower, the
present  value of the minimum lease  payments—discounted at the interest rate implicit in the lease,
if practicable, or else at the Group’s  incremental borrowing rate—and subsequently measured at
amortized cost, using the effective interest rate method.  Finance charges in respect of finance
leases are recognized in the consolidated statement of profit  or loss under ‘‘Financial  costs’’.

Segment information

The information provided to the Group’s chief operating  decision  maker, being the  Chief

Executive Officer, to review the Group’s operating results and allocate resources is on a consolidated
basis for a single reportable segment.  Furthermore, when  the Group charters a  vessel  to  a charterer,
the charterer is free to trade the vessel  worldwide and, as a result, the disclosure of geographic
information is impracticable.

Share-based compensation

Share-based compensation to employees and others providing  similar services are  measured at the

fair value of the equity instruments on  the grant  date. Details regarding the  determination  of  the fair
value of share-based transactions are set out  in Note 22.

The fair value determined at the grant date of the equity-settled share-based  compensation  is
expensed on a straight-line basis over  the vesting  period, based on the  Group’s estimate of equity
instruments that will eventually vest, with  a corresponding increase in equity. At the  end of each
reporting period, the Group revises its  estimate of the number of equity instruments expected  to  vest.
The impact of the revision of the original  estimates, if any,  is recognized  in the  consolidated  statement

F-24

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

2. Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

of profit or loss such that the cumulative expense reflects the revised estimate, with a  corresponding
adjustment to the share-based compensation reserve.

Termination benefits

Termination benefits are payable when employment  is terminated by the Group before the  normal

retirement date, or when an employee accepts voluntary redundancy  in exchange for these  benefits.
The Group recognizes termination benefits at the earlier  of the following dates: (a) when the  Group
can no longer withdraw the offer of those  benefits; and (b)  when  the Group recognizes  costs for a
restructuring that is within the scope  of  IAS  37  Provisions, Contingent Liabilities and  Contingent Assets
and involves the payment of termination  benefits. In the case  of an offer made to encourage voluntary
redundancy, the termination benefits are measured based on the  number of  employees expected to
accept the offer. Benefits falling due  more than 12 months after the  end of the reporting  period are
discounted to present value.

Critical accounting judgments and key sources  of  estimation  uncertainty

The preparation of consolidated financial statements in conformity with IFRS requires
management to make estimates and  assumptions that affect the reported  amounts  of assets and
liabilities, revenues and expenses recognized in the consolidated financial statements. The  Group’s
management evaluates whether estimates  should be made on  an ongoing basis,  utilizing historical
experience, consultation with experts and other methods management considers  reasonable in the
particular circumstances. However, uncertainty about these assumptions and  estimates could result in
outcomes that could require a material adjustment  to  the carrying amount of  the assets or  liabilities  in
the future. Critical accounting judgments  are those that reflect significant judgments of uncertainties
and potentially result in materially different results  under different assumptions and conditions.

Critical accounting judgments

In the process of applying GasLog’s accounting policies,  management has  made the  following
judgments, apart from those involving estimations, that had the most significant  effect  on the  amounts
recognized in the consolidated financial  statements.

Classification of the non-controlling interests: The non-controlling interests in the Partnership
comprise the portion of the Partnership’s common units  that are not directly or  indirectly  held by
GasLog (32,726,222 units as of December  31, 2020).  Under  the terms of the  partnership agreement, the
Partnership is required to distribute 100%  of available  cash (as  defined in  the partnership agreement)
with respect to each quarter within 45 days of the  end of the quarter to the  partners.  Available  cash
can be summarized as cash and cash equivalents less  an amount equal to cash reserves established by
the Partnership’s board of directors to (i)  provide for the proper conduct  of the business of the
Partnership (including reserves for future  capital expenditures and for anticipated future credit needs of
the Partnership) subsequent to such quarter, (ii)  comply with applicable law or any loan  agreement,
security agreement, mortgage, debt instrument or other agreement or obligation  to  which any
Partnership member is a party or by  which it is bound or its assets are subject and/or (iii)  provide funds
for certain distributions relating to future  periods.

F-25

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

2. Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

In reaching a judgment as to whether the non-controlling  interests in the Partnership  should be
classified as liabilities or equity interests, management has considered the  wide discretion of the board
of directors of the Partnership to determine whether  any  portion of the amount of  cash available to the
Partnership constitutes available cash and that it is possible that there could  be  no available cash. In
the event that there is no available cash, as determined  by the  Partnership’s board of directors, the
Partnership does not have a contractual  obligation to make  a distribution.  Accordingly, management
has concluded that the non-controlling interests  do not represent a contractual obligation  on the
Partnership to deliver cash and therefore  should  be  classified as equity  within the financial statements.

Key sources of estimation uncertainty are  as  follows:

Impairment of vessels: The Group evaluates the carrying amounts  of each of its vessels to

determine whether there is any indication that those vessels have suffered an impairment loss by
considering both internal and external sources of  information. If  any such indication exists, the
recoverable amount of vessels is estimated  in order to determine the extent of  the impairment loss, if
any. The total carrying amount of the Group’s vessels as  of December 31, 2020, was  $5,001,174
(December 31, 2019: $4,407,156).

Recoverable amount is the higher of fair value less costs to sell and  value  in use.  The Group’s
estimates of recoverable value assume  that the vessels are all in seaworthy condition  without need for
repair and certified in class without notations  of  any  kind. In assessing the fair  value less cost to sell  of
the vessel, the Group obtains charter free  market values for each vessel from  independent and
internationally recognized ship brokers on a semi-annual  basis, which are also commonly  used  and
accepted by the Group’s lenders for  determining compliance with  the relevant covenants in its credit
facilities. Vessel values can be highly volatile,  so the  charter-free market values  may not be indicative of
the current or future market value of  the Group’s vessels or prices that could be achieved if  it were to
sell them. In assessing value in use, the estimated future cash flows are discounted to their  present
value using a discount rate that reflects  current market assessments of the time value  of  money and  the
risks specific to the asset for which the estimates of future  cash flows have  not  been adjusted. The
projection of discounted cash flows related to vessels is complex and requires management to make
various estimates including future charter  rates, vessel operating  expenses and the discount rate.

As of June 30, 2020 and December 31, 2020, the  carrying amounts of each  of  the six  steam turbine
propulsion (‘‘Steam’’) vessels (the  Methane Rita Andrea, the Methane Jane Elizabeth, the Methane Lydon
Volney, the Methane Alison Victoria, the Methane Shirley Elisabeth and the Methane Heather Sally),
twelve tri-fuel diesel electric (‘‘TFDE’’) vessels (the GasLog Savannah, the GasLog Singapore, the
GasLog Sydney, the GasLog Skagen, the GasLog Seattle, the Solaris, the GasLog Saratoga, the GasLog
Salem, the GasLog Greece, the GasLog Glasgow, the Methane Julia Louise and the Methane Becki Anne)
and four low  pressure dual fuel two-stroke propulsion (‘‘X-DF’’) vessels (the  GasLog Genoa, the
GasLog Gladstone, the GasLog Houston and the GasLog Hong Kong) were higher than the charter free
market values estimated by ship brokers  on both  dates, while two additional TFDE vessels, the GasLog
Geneva and the GasLog Gibraltar had carrying amounts higher than their  estimated  charter-free market
values as of December 31, 2020 only.  The  Group concluded that this,  together with certain other events
and circumstances (as further described in Note 6) indicated the existence  of potential impairment of
these vessels. As a result, the Group  performed an impairment assessment for these vessels by

F-26

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

2. Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

comparing their values in use, being  the discounted  projected net operating  cash flows for these vessels
to their carrying values as of June 30, 2020 and December 31, 2020.  The assumptions  that  the Group
used in its discounted projected net operating cash flow analysis  included, among others, utilization,
operating revenues, voyage expenses  and  commissions, dry-docking costs, operating expenses (including
vessel management costs), residual values  and  the discount rate. The key assumptions, being those to
which  the outcome of the impairment  assessment is most sensitive, are the estimate  of charter  rates for
non-contracted revenue days and the discount rate.

Revenue assumptions were based on  contracted  time charter  rates up to the end of  the current
contract for each vessel, as well as the estimated average time charter rates for the remaining life of
the vessel after the completion of its  current contract. The revenue assumptions  exclude days of
scheduled off-hire based on the fleet’s historical performance and internal  forecasts.  The estimated
daily time charter rates used for non-contracted revenue days after the completion of the current  time
charter were based on a combination  of  (i) recent charter  market rates,  (ii) conditions  existing in the
LNG market as of June 30, 2020 and  December 31, 2020, (iii)  historical  average  time charter rates,
based on publications by independent third  party maritime  research services (‘‘maritime research
publications’’), (iv) estimated future time  charter  rates, based  on  maritime research publications that
provide such forecasts and (v) management’s internal assessment of long-term charter  rates  achievable
by each class of vessel.

More specifically, for vessels whose charters expire within  the next twelve months, the estimated
charter rates and utilization for the first  year from the  assessment date  were based on the  approved
annual budget for the respective year,  which was formed based  on the  anticipated market conditions
for that period (including the effect of  the COVID-19 pandemic) and  the latest  available  maritime
research publications from ship brokers for  short-term (less than  12 months) employment of a vessel
operating in the spot market on less  than one-year time charter  contracts.

For non-contracted periods starting on  the second year for already expired charters or upon the

expiration of the firm charter period of  a  vessel and  up to June 30, 2022, the Group used  the most
recent market rate for a longer-term  (3-year) time  charter rate  based on available data from  maritime
research publications reflecting management’s view of the  anticipated extent  of the market disruption
caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.  For non-contracted periods starting on July 1, 2022  for already
expired charters or upon the expiration of the firm charter  period of a  vessel  and up to June  30, 2025,
the Group used charter rates based on a combination of recent charter market  rates for a term (3-year)
time charter rate based on available data  from  maritime research publication, historical  average time
charter rates and estimated future time  charter rates,  in order  to  incorporate  the anticipated  effect of
the gradual stabilization of the LNG shipping market in the  post-COVID-19 era. Such rates were  lower
than prevailing spot rates on each of  the  assessment dates.

For the remaining period from July 1, 2025 through the end  of  each vessel’s useful life  (for
non-contracted periods), the estimated  average  time charter  rates for Steam, TFDE and X-DF  vessels
were based on analysis of future supply  and demand  for LNG,  analysis  of  future LNG  shipping supply
and demand balances, internally estimated  and  market-derived  costs  of building  and financing newbuild
LNG vessels, the technical characteristics  of each  vessel  and an  assessment of the appropriate discount

F-27

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

2. Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

for Steam and TFDE vessels’ charter rates compared  to  modern newbuild LNG  carriers,  which is
driven largely by unit freight cost differentials and utilization of such vessels.

Recognizing that the LNG industry is cyclical  and subject  to significant volatility  based on  factors

beyond the Group’s control, management believes that the use of the revenue estimates  discussed
above to be reasonable as of the reporting date. The  Group has assumed no  inflation or any other
revenue escalation or growth factors  in determining forecasted time charter rates  beyond the contracted
charter period through the end of a vessel’s useful life,  consistent with long-run historical evidence.

The Group used an annual operating expenses escalation factor equal to 1% based on  its historical
data and experience, as well as its expectations  of future  inflation and  operating and dry-docking  costs.
Estimates for the remaining useful lives  of the current fleet and residual and scrap values are the  same
as those used for the Group’s depreciation policy. All estimates used and  assumptions  made were in
accordance with the Group’s internal  budgets  and historical experience of the  shipping industry.

In the Group’s impairment assessment, the rate used to discount  future estimated  cash flows to
their present values was approximately 5.8%  to  6.4% as of  December  31, 2020 (6.5% to 7.25%  as of
December 31, 2019). This was based on an estimated weighted average cost of capital  calculated using
cost of equity and cost of debt components, adjusted also for vessel-specific risks and uncertainties.

The values in use for five of the six Steam vessels calculated  as per above  were lower than the
respective carrying amounts of those  vessels  and, consequently, an impairment loss of $28,627 was
recognized in the year ended December 31,  2020 (Note 6). The values  in use for each of the  remaining
Steam, TFDE and X-DF vessels with  indicators of impairment  were greater than their respective
carrying  amounts, and therefore no impairment loss was recognized  for these  vessels.

In connection with the impairment testing of our vessels as  of December  31, 2020, we performed a

sensitivity analysis on the most difficult,  subjective or  complex assumptions that have the potential to
affect the outcome of the impairment  assessment, which  are the projected charter hire rates used to
forecast future cash flows for non-contracted revenue  days and the discount  rate used, in particular for
the Steam vessels (Note 6). It is reasonably possible that changes to these assumptions within  the next
financial year could require a material  adjustment of  the carrying amount of the  Group’s Steam vessels.

Adoption of new and revised IFRS

(a) Standards and interpretations adopted in  the current period

At the date of authorization of these consolidated financial statements, there were  no IFRS
standards and amendments adopted in  the current period with a material  effect  on the  Group’s
financial statements.

(b) Standards and amendments in issue not yet  adopted

In January 2020, the IASB issued a narrow-scope amendment to IAS 1  Presentation of Financial
Statements, to clarify that liabilities are classified as either  current or non-current, depending  on the
rights that exist at the end of the reporting period. Classification is  unaffected  by  the expectations of
the entity or events after the reporting date (for example, the receipt  of  a waiver or a breach of
covenant). The amendment also defines the ‘‘settlement’’  of a liability as the  extinguishment of a

F-28

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

2. Significant Accounting Policies (Continued)

liability with cash, other economic resources or an  entity’s own equity  instruments. The amendment will
be effective for annual periods beginning on or after  January 1, 2022  and  should be applied
retrospectively in accordance with IAS 8  Accounting  Policies, Changes in  Accounting Estimates  and
Errors. Earlier application is permitted. Management anticipates that  this amendment will not have a
material impact on the Group’s financial  statements.

In August 2020, the IASB issued the Phase  2 amendments to IFRS 9  Financial Instruments, IFRS 7

Financial Instruments: Disclosures, IFRS 4 and IFRS 16 in connection with the Phase  2 of the interest
rate benchmark reform. The amendments address the issues  arising from the  implementation of the
reforms,  including the replacement of one  benchmark  with an  alternative one. The amendment will be
effective for annual periods beginning on or after  January 1, 2021.  Early application is permitted.
Management is currently evaluating the  impact  of  this  standard on the  Group’s consolidated financial
statements.

3. Goodwill

Goodwill resulted from the acquisition  in 2005 of  Ceres LNG Services Ltd., the  vessel

management company, which represents  a  cash-generating unit. On September 30,  2011, Ceres  LNG
Services Ltd. was renamed ‘‘GasLog LNG Services Ltd’’. As of December 31, 2020,  the Group assessed
the recoverable amount of goodwill and  concluded that goodwill associated  with the Group’s vessel
management company was not impaired.  The  recoverable amount of the  vessel  management operations
is determined based on discounted future cash  flows  based on  the financial budget approved by
management for the year-ending December  31, 2021  and management forecasts until 2024.

The key assumptions used in the value-in-use calculations (2021 and  beyond)  are as follows:

(i) Average inflation of 1.0% per annum based on historical  data and performance;

(ii) A pre-tax discount rate of 7.2%  per annum based on  cost of equity;

(iii) Annual growth rate of 1.0%; and

(iv) 1 Euro = USD 1.20 based on the 2021  budget.

Growth is based on the number of vessels expected  to  be  under management based on the
shipbuilding contracts in place at the end of the year and  the long-term strategy of the Group.
Management believes that any reasonably possible further change in  the key assumptions  on which
recoverable amount is based would not  cause the carrying amount of the cash-generating  unit to exceed
its  recoverable amount.

4. Equity Transactions

GasLog Partners’ offerings

On January 17, 2018, GasLog Partners  completed a  public  offering of 4,600,000 8.200% Series B
Cumulative Redeemable Perpetual Fixed to Floating  Rate Preference Units (the ‘‘Partnership’s Series B
Preference Units’’), including 600,000 units issued upon the exercise in full by the underwriters of their
option to purchase additional Partnership’s Series B Preference Units,  at  a price to the public of $25.00

F-29

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

4. Equity Transactions (Continued)

per  preference unit. The net proceeds  from  the offering, after deducting underwriting discounts,
commissions and other offering expenses,  were  $111,194. The Partnership’s Series B  Preference  Units
are listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the  symbol ‘‘GLOP PR  B’’.

On April 3, 2018, GasLog Partners issued 33,998 common units  in connection with the  vesting of
16,999 Restricted Common Units (‘‘RCUs’’) and 16,999  Performance Common  Units (‘‘PCUs’’) under
its  2015  Long-Term Incentive Plan (the ‘‘GasLog Partners’ Plan’’) at a price of $23.55  per  unit.
Subsequently, on April 26, 2018, in connection with the acquisition of  GAS-fourteen Ltd., the entity
that owns and charters the  GasLog Gibraltar, GasLog Partners issued 1,858,975 common units to
GasLog at a price of $24.21 per unit.  On  November  15, 2018, GasLog  Partners completed  a public
offering of 4,000,000 8.500% Series C Cumulative  Redeemable  Perpetual Fixed to Floating Rate
Preference Units (the ‘‘Partnership’s Series  C Preference Units’’), at a price to the public of $25.00 per
preference unit. The net proceeds from  the offering, after deducting underwriting  discounts,
commissions and other offering expenses,  were  $96,307. The Partnership’s  Series C Preference Units
are listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the  symbol ‘‘GLOP PR  C’’.

On November 27, 2018, the Partnership Agreement was amended to allow for  the substitution of

the existing incentive distribution rights (the ‘‘Old IDRs’’) with a new class of incentive distribution
rights (the ‘‘New IDRs’’, together with the Old IDRs, the ‘‘IDRs’’) with revised rights  to  distributions.
Pursuant to this amendment, the 48.0% tier  of  the New IDRs holders was  removed, while the
definition of the available cash from operating surplus for distribution to the  New IDRs holders was
revised to exclude any available cash  from operating surplus  generated from third-party
(i.e., non-GasLog) acquisitions, as defined in the agreement. In exchange for the waiving  of the
aforementioned rights, the Partnership paid $25,000  to  GasLog, holder of the Old IDRs.

The following table illustrates the percentage allocation of the additional  available cash  from

operating surplus after the payment of preference  unit distributions,  in respect to such  rights, until
November 27, 2018:

Old  IDRs

Marginal Percentage Interest in Distributions

Total Quarterly
Distribution
Target Amount

Common
Unitholders

General Holders  of
Partner

IDRs

Minimum Quarterly Distribution . . . . . . . . .
First  Target Distribution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Second Target Distribution . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Third Target Distribution . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Thereafter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

$0.375
$0.375 up to $0.43125
$0.43125 up to $0.46875
$0.46875 up to $0.5625
Above $0.5625

98.0%
98.0%
85.0%
75.0%
50.0%

2.0%
2.0%
2.0%
2.0%
2.0%

0%
0%
13.0%
23.0%
48.0%

Effective November 27, 2018, the percentage allocation  of  the  additional available cash from
operating surplus after the payment of preference unit distributions  and excluding available cash from

F-30

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

4. Equity Transactions (Continued)

operating surplus derived from non-GasLog acquisitions was amended, in respect to such rights, as
follows:

New IDRs

Marginal Percentage Interest in Distributions

Total Quarterly
Distribution
Target Amount

Common
Unitholders

General Holders  of
Partner

IDRs

Minimum Quarterly Distribution . . . . . . . . .
First  Target Distribution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Second Target Distribution . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Thereafter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

$0.375
$0.375 up to $0.43125
$0.43125 up to $0.46875
Above $0.46875

98.0%
98.0%
85.0%
75.0%

2.0%
2.0%
2.0%
2.0%

0%
0%
13.0%
23.0%

Under the Partnership’s ‘‘at-the-market’’ common equity offering programme  (‘‘ATM

Programme’’), in the year ended December 31, 2018, GasLog Partners  has issued and received payment
for 2,553,899 common units at a weighted average price of  $23.72 per common unit  for total  net
proceeds, after deducting fees and other expenses, of $60,013.

On January 29, 2019, the board of directors  of GasLog Partners authorized a  unit repurchase
programme of up to $25,000 covering  the period January 31,  2019 to December 31, 2021. Under  the
terms of the repurchase programme,  GasLog Partners may repurchase common  units from time to
time, at its discretion, on the open market or  in privately negotiated transactions. During the year
ended December 31, 2019, GasLog Partners repurchased and  cancelled 1,171,572  common units at a
weighted average price of $19.52 per  common  unit, for a total cost  of  $22,890 including  commissions.

On February 26, 2019, the Partnership entered into a Third Amended and  Restated  Equity

Distribution Agreement to further increase the size of the ATM Programme  from $144,040 to $250,000.
As of December 31, 2019, the unutilized  portion  of  the ATM Programme is $126,556.

On April 1, 2019, GasLog Partners issued 49,850 common units  in connection with the  vesting of

24,925 RCUs and 24,925 PCUs under the GasLog  Partners’ Plan at a price of  $22.99 per unit.

On June 24, 2019, the Partnership Agreement was amended, effective June 30, 2019, to eliminate

the IDRs in exchange for the issuance  by  the Partnership to GasLog of 2,532,911 common  units and
2,490,000 Class B units (of which 415,000 are Class B-1 units,  415,000 are  Class  B-2 units, 415,000 are
Class B-3 units, 415,000 are Class B-4 units, 415,000 are Class B-5 units and 415,000 are Class  B-6
units), issued on June 30, 2019. The Class  B units  have all of  the rights and obligations  attached to the
common units, except for voting rights and participation  in distributions  until such  time as  GasLog
exercises its right to convert the Class B  units to common units. After  the  conversion  of the first
tranche of 415,000 Class B units to common  units on July 1,  2020, the remaining 2,075,000 Class B
units will become eligible for conversion on a one-for-one  basis into common units at  GasLog’s  option
on July 1, 2021, July 1, 2022, July 1, 2023, July 1, 2024 and  July  1, 2025 for the Class B-2 units,
Class B-3 units, Class B-4 units, Class B-5  units and the Class B-6  units, respectively. Following the
IDRs’ elimination, 98% of the available  cash is distributed  to  the common unitholders  and 2%  is

F-31

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

4. Equity Transactions (Continued)

distributed to the general partner. The updated earnings allocation applies  to  the Partnership’s  earnings
from June 30, 2019 and onwards.

Allocation of GasLog Partners’ (loss)/profit(*)

2019

2020

Partnership’s (loss)/profit attributable  to:
Common unitholders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
General partner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Paid and accrued preference equity distributions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

(66,268) 25,970
561
(1,479)
30,328
30,328

Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

(37,419) 56,859

Partnership’s (loss)/profit allocated to GasLog . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Partnership’s (loss)/profit allocated to non-controlling interests . . . . . .

(22,467)
8,622
(14,952) 48,237

Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

(37,419) 56,859

*

Excludes profits of GAS-twelve Ltd. for the period prior to its transfer to the Partnership on April 1, 2019.

On February 5, 2020, the board of directors of GasLog Partners  authorized  a renewal of the  unit
repurchase programme taking the total authority  outstanding under  the programme  to  $25,000, to be
utilized from February 10, 2020 to December 31,  2021. In the year ended December 31,  2020, GasLog
Partners  repurchased and cancelled a total of 191,490 units at a weighted  average price of $5.18 per
common unit for a total amount of $996, including commissions.

On April 3, 2020, GasLog Partners issued 46,843 common units  in connection with the  vesting of
25,551 RCUs and 21,292 PCUs under the GasLog Partners’ Plan. On  June 30, 2020, GasLog Partners
issued an additional 21,589 common  units  in connection  with the  vesting of  11,776 RCUs and 9,813
PCUs under the GasLog Partners’ Plan.

On July 1, 2020, GasLog Partners issued 415,000 common units in connection  with GasLog’s

option to convert the first tranche of  its Class B units issued upon  the elimination  of IDRs in  June
2019.

Finally, on September 25, 2020, GasLog Partners issued 365,700 common  units in  connection with

the vesting of 182,850 RCUs and 182,850  PCUs under the GasLog  Partners’  Plan.

Dividends declared attributable to non-controlling  interests included in  the consolidated statement

of changes in equity represent cash distributions to holders of  common and  preference  units.

In the year ended December 31, 2020,  the board of directors  of the Partnership approved and

declared cash distributions of $26,531  and of  $30,328 for the common units  and preference units,
respectively, held by non-controlling  interests.

F-32

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

5. Investment in Associates and Joint Venture

The Group participates in the following associates and joint venture:

Country of
incorporation

% of
ownership
interest

2019

2020

Nature of
relationship

Measurement
method

Principal
activity

Name

Egypt LNG

Shipping Ltd.(1)

. . Bermuda

Gastrade(2) . . . . . . . Greece
The Cool Pool
Limited(3)

25% 25% Associate
20% 20% Associate

Equity  method Vessel-owning company
Equity method Service company

. . . . . . Marshall Islands —

— Joint  venture Equity  method Service company

(1)

(2)

(3)

Egypt  LNG Shipping Ltd. owns and operates a 145,000 cbm LNG vessel built in 2007.

Gastrade  is a private limited company licensed to develop an independent natural gas system offshore Alexandroupolis in
Northern Greece utilizing a floating storage and  regasification unit (‘‘FSRU’’) along with other fixed infrastructure.

The Cool  Pool Limited is the commercial manager of the Cool Pool acting as an agent (Note 1).

Investment in associates and joint venture consist of the following:

As of January 1, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Additions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Share of profit of associates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Dividend declared . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

20,713
158
1,627
(878)

21,620
472
2,192
(2,525)

As  of December 31,

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

21,620

21,759

Associates

2019

2020

The additions of $472 relate to the investment in  Gastrade (December 31, 2019:  $158).  On

February 9, 2017, GasLog acquired a  20% shareholding in  Gastrade, a private limited company licensed
to develop an independent natural gas system offshore Alexandroupolis  in Northern Greece utilizing an
FSRU along with other fixed infrastructure.  GasLog, as well as being a shareholder, will provide
operations and maintenance (‘‘O&M’’) services  for the  FSRU  through an O&M  agreement which was
signed on February 23, 2018.

F-33

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

5. Investment in Associates and Joint Venture  (Continued)

Summarized financial information in  respect of the associates and the joint venture is set  out

below:

Associates

Joint Venture

2019

2020

2019

2020

Current
Total current assets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Total current liabilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Non-current
Total non-current assets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Total non-current liabilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

22,749
(15,258)

25,861 —
(18,393) —

106,421
(82,153)

98,926 —
(73,571) —

Net assets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

31,759

Group’s share . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

7,840

32,823

8,025

—

—

Effect from translation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Goodwill

(41)
13,821

(87) —
13,821 —

Investment in associates and joint venture . . . . .

21,620

21,759

—

—
—

—
—

—

—

—
—

—

Associates

Joint Venture

2018

2019

2020

2018

2019

2020

Revenues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Profit for the year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Total comprehensive income for the  year . . . . . .

23,513
7,040
7,040

26,294
6,429
6,429

Group’s share in profit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

1,800

1,627

27,807
8,593
8,593

2,192

Dividend declared . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

(8,091)

(3,510)

(10,100)

Group’s share in dividend . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

2,023

878

2,525

346,170
—
—

121,434 —
— —
— —

—

—

—

— —

— —

— —

F-34

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

6. Tangible Fixed Assets and Vessels  Under  Construction

The movements in tangible fixed assets and vessels under construction  are reported in the

following table:

Office property
and other
tangible assets

Total
tangible
fixed assets

Vessels
under
construction

Vessels

Cost
As  of January 1, 2019 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Additions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Return of capital expenditures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Transfer from vessels under construction . . . . . . . . .
Fully amortized fixed assets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

4,899,678
26,233
(11,224)
406,870
(7,209)

As  of December 31, 2019 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

5,314,348

Additions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Disposals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Transfer from vessels under construction . . . . . . . . .
Fully amortized fixed assets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

40,116
—
747,940
(24,363)

As  of December 31, 2020 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

6,078,041

Accumulated depreciation
As  of January 1, 2019 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Depreciation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Impairment loss on vessels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Fully amortized fixed assets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

595,426
156,826
162,149
(7,209)

As  of December 31, 2019 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

907,192

Depreciation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Impairment loss on vessels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Fully amortized fixed assets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

165,411
28,627
(24,363)

23,710
1,454
—
—
—

25,164

11,245
(3,029)
—
—

33,380

4,380
875
—
—

5,255

790
—
—

4,923,388
27,687
(11,224)
406,870
(7,209)

159,275
450,918
—
(406,870)
—

5,339,512

203,323

51,361
(3,029)
747,940
(24,363)

677,456
—
(747,940)
—

6,111,421

132,839

599,806
157,701
162,149
(7,209)

912,447

166,201
28,627
(24,363)

—
—
—
—

—

—
—
—

—

As  of December 31, 2020 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

1,076,867

6,045

1,082,912

Net book value
As  of December 31, 2019 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

4,407,156

As  of December 31, 2020 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

5,001,174

19,909

27,335

4,427,065

203,323

5,028,509

132,839

Vessels with an aggregate carrying amount of $5,001,174 as of December 31, 2020 (December 31,

2019: $4,407,156) have been pledged as  collateral  under the terms of the Group’s loan agreements
(Note 13).

As of June 30, 2020 and December 31, 2020, a number of negative indicators such as downward
pressure on economic activity and energy demand, as well as significant  uncertainty regarding future
LNG demand and, therefore, LNG shipping requirements  pursuant to the COVID-19 pandemic,
combined with our reduced expectations for the  estimated  rates at  which employment for the Group’s
vessels could be secured over the near-term in the spot market prompted the Group to perform an

F-35

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

6. Tangible Fixed Assets and Vessels  Under  Construction (Continued)

impairment assessment of its vessels  in accordance with the Group’s  accounting policy (Note 2). The
recoverable amounts (values in use)  for four Steam  vessels  owned by the Partnership  and the  one
Steam vessel owned by GasLog (in the table below)  calculated as per above  were lower  than the
respective carrying amounts of these  vessels  and,  consequently,  an aggregate impairment  loss of  $28,627
was recognized in profit or loss in the year ended  December 31,  2020.

Vessel

As of and for the year ended
December 31, 2020

Impairment loss

Recoverable amount

Methane Rita Andrea . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Methane Lydon Volney . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Methane Alison Victoria . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Methane Shirley Elisabeth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Methane Heather Sally . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Total

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

(4,933)
(4,704)
(2,359)
(12,412)
(4,219)

(28,627)

91,162
99,285
96,385
92,688
103,274

482,794

As of December 31, 2020, the most sensitive and/or subjective  assumptions that have the  potential

to affect the outcome of the impairment  assessment for the Steam vessels are  the projected  charter hire
rate used to forecast future cash flows  for non-contracted revenue days  (the  ‘‘re-chartering rate’’)  and
the discount rate used. The average re-chartering rate over the remaining useful life of the  vessels used
in our impairment exercise for the Steam vessels was $40  per day  (December 31, 2019: $41 per day).
Increasing/decreasing the average re-chartering  rate used by  $5 per day would result in  an impairment
reversal of $109,772/ impairment loss of $115,887, respectively. The discount rate used for the Steam
vessels was 6.4% as of December 31, 2020  (December 31,  2019:  7.25%).  Increasing/decreasing  the
discount rate by 0.5% would result in  an  impairment loss of $26,751/  an  impairment reversal of
$14,492, respectively.

On October 11, 2016, GasLog LNG  Services  Ltd.  entered into  an arrangement whereby it  would

have access to all long lead items (‘‘LLIs’’) necessary  for the conversion  of  a GasLog LNG carrier
vessel into FSRUs whereby such conversion work would be  undertaken by Keppel Shipyard Limited
(‘‘Keppel’’). GasLog was only obligated to  pay for such LLIs if  utilized for a  GasLog vessel conversion
or, if the LLIs had not been utilized  in  a GasLog vessel conversion within three years from  November
2016, the items might be put to GasLog  at 85%  of the original  cost, or GasLog  might call for the
purchase of such LLIs at 115% of the  original cost. On February  7, 2020, GasLog paid  $17,625 for the
acquisition of such LLIs, following the expiration  of the arrangement.

Related to the acquisition of six vessels from a  subsidiary of Methane Services Limited  (‘‘MSL’’)  in

2014 and another two vessels in 2015, the Group was committed to purchase depot  spares from MSL
with an aggregate initial value of $8,000  of which depot spares with  value of  $660 had  already been
purchased and paid while the remaining were acquired and  paid  on June 2, 2020.

In June 2020, GasLog LNG Services Ltd.  agreed to sell a low-pressure turbine  which was included

in Office property and other tangible assets  to  Egypt LNG  Shipping Ltd. to be installed  on the
Methane Nile Eagle at a price of $2,457. The disposal resulted in a loss of $572.

F-36

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

6. Tangible Fixed Assets and Vessels  Under  Construction (Continued)

In April and May  2017, GasLog LNG Services  Ltd. entered into agreements in relation  to

investments in certain of the Partnership’s  and GasLog’s  vessels,  with the aim of enhancing their
operational performance. On March 7,  2019,  GasLog  LNG Services Ltd.  and one of  the suppliers
signed an interim agreement regarding  the reimbursement of amounts already paid by the Group  in
respect of the aforementioned enhancements  which were not timely delivered or in the  correct
contractual condition. In accordance  with  the terms of  the interim agreement,  $10,451 has been
reimbursed to the Group with realized foreign  exchange  losses of $773 recorded  in profit  or loss  in the
year ended December 31, 2019.

In May 2014, GAS-twenty three Ltd. entered into a shipbuilding  contract with Samsung Heavy
Industries Co., Ltd. (‘‘Samsung’’) for  the  construction of an LNG carrier (174,000 cbm). The vessel (the
GasLog Gladstone) was delivered on March 15, 2019.

In September 2016, GasLog Carriers  entered  into  a shipbuilding contract  with Samsung for the

construction of one LNG carrier (180,000  cbm).  The  vessel (the GasLog Warsaw) was delivered on
July 31, 2019.

In January 2018, GAS-twenty eight Ltd. entered into a shipbuilding contract  with Samsung for the

construction of one LNG carrier (180,000  cbm).  The  vessel (the GasLog Windsor) was delivered on
April 1, 2020.

In March 2018, GAS-thirty one Ltd.  entered  into  a shipbuilding contract with  Samsung  for the

construction of one LNG carrier (180,000  cbm). The vessel (the GasLog Wales) was delivered on
May 11, 2020.

In May 2018, GAS-thirty Ltd. entered into a shipbuilding contract with Samsung for  the

construction of one LNG carrier (180,000  cbm). The vessel (the GasLog Westminster) was delivered on
July 15, 2020.

In August 2018, GAS-thirty two Ltd. entered into a  shipbuilding contract  with Samsung for the
construction of one LNG carrier (174,000  cbm). The vessel (the GasLog Georgetown) was delivered on
November 16, 2020.

Vessels under construction

As of December 31, 2020, GasLog has the  following  newbuildings on order at  Samsung:

LNG Carrier

Date  of agreement

Estimated
delivery

Cargo
Capacity (cbm)

GasLog Galveston . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Hull No. 2311 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . December 2018 Q2 2021
Hull No. 2312 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . December 2018 Q3 2021

August 2018

Q1 2021(1)

174,000
180,000
180,000

(1)

The vessel was delivered on January 4, 2021 (Note 30).

Vessels under construction represent scheduled advance payments to the shipyards  as well as

certain capitalized  expenditures. As of December 31, 2020,  the Group  has paid to the shipyard

F-37

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

6. Tangible Fixed Assets and Vessels  Under  Construction (Continued)

$129,252 for the vessels that are under construction and expects to pay the remaining installments as
they come due upon each vessel’s keel  laying, launching and  delivery (Note  23(a)).

The vessels under construction costs as of December 31, 2019 and 2020 are  comprised of:

Progress shipyard installments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Onsite supervision costs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Critical spare parts, equipment and other  vessel  delivery

As of
December 31,

2019

2020

197,637
3,879

129,252
1,701

expenses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

1,807

1,886

Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

203,323

132,839

7. Leases

On adoption of IFRS 16, the Group recognised lease  liabilities  in relation to leases of  various
properties, vessel communication equipment  and  certain printers which  had previously been  classified
as operating leases under IAS 17  Leases. As of January 1, 2019, these liabilities were  measured  at the
present  value of the remaining lease  payments, discounted using the current weighted average
incremental borrowing rate.

On February 24, 2016, GasLog’s subsidiary, GAS-twenty six  Ltd., completed the  sale and leaseback

of the Methane Julia Louise with a subsidiary of Mitsui. Mitsui has the  right to on-sell and lease  back
the vessel. The vessel was sold to Mitsui  for a cash  consideration of $217,000. GasLog  leased back the
vessel under a bareboat charter from Mitsui for a period of up to 20 years. GasLog has the option to
repurchase the vessel on pre-agreed terms no earlier than the end of  year ten and no later than the
end of year 17 of the bareboat charter. The bareboat hire  is  fixed  and GasLog  had a  holiday period for
the first 210 days, which expired on September 21, 2016. This  leaseback meets the definition of a
finance lease under IAS 17  Leases.

F-38

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

7. Leases (Continued)

The movements in right-of-use assets  are  reported in the  following  table:

Right-of-Use  Assets

As of January 1, 2019 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Additions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Depreciation expense . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Vessels

206,753(*)
1,001
(7,722)

As  of December 31, 2019 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

200,032

Additions, net . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Depreciation expense . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

5,799
(8,163)

As  of December 31, 2020 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

197,668

Vessel
Equipment

Properties Other

Total

2,630
336
(1,109)

1,857

833
(1,253)

1,437

4,969
1,080
(1,499)

4,550

1,255
(1,547)

4,258

19
47
(10)

214,371
2,464
(10,340)

56

206,495

67
(49)

7,954
(11,012)

74

203,437

*

The  balance as of December 31, 2018 represented  the vessel  held  under finance lease and was included in the financial
statement line ‘‘Vessel held under finance lease’’, which was  renamed to ‘‘Right-of-use assets’’ as of January 1, 2019.

An analysis of the lease liabilities is as  follows:

Lease Liabilities

2019

2020

As of January 1, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Additions, net
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Lease charge (Note 19) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Payments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

213,374
1,462
10,506
(20,412)

204,930
2,155
9,921
(20,836)

As  of December 31,

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

204,930

196,170

Lease liability, current portion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Lease liability, non-current portion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

9,363
195,567

9,644
186,526

Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

204,930

196,170

An amount of $327 has been recognized  in the consolidated statement of profit or loss for  the year

ended December 31, 2020 ($106 for the  year ended December 31, 2019), which  represents the lease
expense incurred for low value leases not  included in the measurement of the right-of-use assets  and
the lease liability.

F-39

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

8. Cash and Cash Equivalents

Cash and cash equivalents consist of  the following:

Current accounts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Time deposits (with original maturities of three  months or less) .
Ship management client accounts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Restricted cash . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

113,655
149,491
601

182,056
36,971
397
— 147,845

Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

263,747

367,269

As of December 31,

2019

2020

Restricted cash represents the cash in  relation  to  the amount drawn for the delivery  of  the GasLog

Galveston until her delivery from the shipyard on January 4,  2021 (Note 30).

Ship management client accounts represent  amounts provided by the  clients of GasLog LNG

Services Ltd. in order to enable the Group  to  cover obligations of vessels under  management. A
compensating balance is held as a current  liability.

9. Trade and Other Receivables

Trade and other receivables consist of the following:

Trade receivables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
VAT receivable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Accrued income . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Insurance claims . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Other receivables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

As of
December 31,

2019

2020

9,463
637
8,274
1,400
5,126

5,113
1,139
16,818
4,236
8,917

Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

24,900

36,223

Trade and other receivables are amounts due from third parties for services  performed in the
ordinary course of business. They are  generally  due  for  settlement immediately and therefore are  all
classified as current. Trade and other receivables are recognized initially  at the amount of  consideration
that is unconditional unless they contain  certain significant  financing components, at which point they
are recognized at fair value. The Group  holds  the trade receivables with the objective to collect the
contractual cash flows and therefore measures them  subsequently at  amortized cost using the effective
interest rate method.

Accrued income represents net revenues  receivable from  charterers, which have  not  yet been

invoiced; all other amounts not yet invoiced are included under Other receivables.

As of December 31, 2019 and 2020 no  allowance  for  expected credit losses was recorded.

F-40

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

10. Other Non-Current Assets

Other non-current assets consist of the following:

As of
December 31,

2019

2020

Various guarantees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Other long-term assets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Cash collaterals on swaps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

388
1,613
22,220

289
5,378
6,796

Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

24,221

12,463

Cash collaterals on swaps represent cash deposited for the Group’s interest  rate swaps being the
difference between their fair value and an  agreed threshold. An amount of $16,671 of cash  collaterals
has been included in Prepayments and other current assets (December 31, 2019: nil).

11. Share Capital

GasLog’s authorized share capital consists of 500,000,000 shares  with a par value $0.01 per share.

On February 13, 2020 and February 14, 2020, GasLog repurchased 323,919 common shares  at a
weighted average price of $6.1443 per  share  for a  total amount of $2,000 under its share  repurchase
programme.

On June 29, 2020, GasLog issued 14,400,000 common shares at a price of $2.50  per  share for total

gross  proceeds of $36,000 through a  private placement  of unregistered  common shares.

As of December 31, 2020, the share  capital consisted  of  95,176,443 issued and outstanding
common shares, par value $0.01 per share,  216,683 treasury shares  issued and held by GasLog and
4,600,000 Preference Shares issued and  outstanding  (December 31, 2019: 80,871,670  issued and
outstanding common shares, par value  $0.01 per share, 121,456  treasury shares issued and held by
GasLog and 4,600,000 Preference Shares issued and outstanding). The movements in the  number of

F-41

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

11. Share Capital  (Continued)

shares, the share capital, the Preference Shares, the contributed surplus and the treasury  shares are
reported in the following table:

Number of Shares

Number of Number of Number of
preference
treasury
shares
shares

common
shares

Amounts

Share Preference Contributed Treasury
shares
capital

surplus

shares

Outstanding as of January 1, 2018 . 80,717,885

275,241 4,600,000

810

Purchase of treasury shares . . . . . .
Treasury shares distributed for

awards vested or exercised in the
year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Equity raising fees . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Dividends declared deducted from

contributed surplus due to
accumulated deficit

. . . . . . . . . .

Outstanding as of December 31,

(2,818)

2,818

— —

146,179 (146,179)
—

—

— —
— —

—

—

— —

2018 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80,861,246

131,880 4,600,000

810

Purchase of treasury shares . . . . . .
Treasury shares distributed for

awards vested or exercised in the
year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Equity raising fees . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Dividends declared deducted from

contributed surplus due to
accumulated deficit

. . . . . . . . . .

Outstanding as of December 31,

(212,111) 212,111

— —

222,535 (222,535)
—

—

— —
— —

—

—

— —

2019 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80,871,670

121,456 4,600,000

810

Purchase of treasury shares . . . . . .
Proceeds from private placement,

(323,919) 323,919

— —

net of offering costs . . . . . . . . . . 14,400,000

—

— 144

46

—

—
—

—

46

—

—
—

—

46

—

—

911,766

(6,960)

—

(62)

— 3,756
—

(395)

(60,795)

—

850,576

(3,266)

— (3,752)

— 4,859
—

(595)

(89,310)

—

760,671

(2,159)

— (2,000)

34,849

—

Treasury shares distributed for

awards vested or exercised in the
year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Dividends declared deducted from

contributed surplus due to
accumulated deficit

. . . . . . . . . .

Outstanding as of December 31,

228,692 (228,692)

— —

—

— 2,819

2020 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95,176,443

216,683 4,600,000

954

—

—

— —

—

46

(35,698)

—

759,822

(1,340)

The treasury shares were acquired by  GasLog  in  2014, 2018, 2019 and 2020 in relation to the

settlement of share-based compensation  awards (Note 22).

F-42

Total
reserves

18,347
(436)

17,911

(258)
4,434
(3,074)
(51)

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

12. Reserves

The movements in reserves are reported in the following table:

Hedging

Employee
benefits

Share-based
compensation
reserve

Balance as of December 31, 2017 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Retained earnings adjustment(1) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Balance as of January 1, 2018 (restated) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Effective portion of changes in fair value of cash flow  hedges
Share-based compensation, net of accrued  dividend . . . . . . .
Settlement of share-based compensation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Actuarial loss . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Balance as of December 31, 2018 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

(142)
(436)

(578)

(258)
—
—
—

(836)

(105)
—

(105)

—
—
—
(51)

18,594
—

18,594

—
4,434
(3,074)
—

(156)

19,954

18,962

Effective portion of changes in fair value of cash flow  hedges
Recycled loss of cash flow hedges reclassified  to  profit or

loss . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Share-based compensation, net of accrued  dividend . . . . . . .
Settlement of share-based compensation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

(2,933)

697
—
—

—

—
—
—

—

(2,933)

—
4,794
(4,721)

697
4,794
(4,721)

Balance as of December 31, 2019 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

(3,072)

(156)

20,027

16,799

Effective portion of changes in fair value of cash flow  hedges
Share-based compensation, net of accrued  dividend . . . . . . .
Settlement of share-based compensation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Actuarial gain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

(750)
—
—
—

—
—
—
57

—
5,385
(2,824)
—

(750)
5,385
(2,824)
57

Balance as of December 31, 2020 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

(3,822)

(99)

22,588

18,667

(1)

Adjusted so as to reflect certain amendments introduced due to the adoption of IFRS 15 Revenue from Contracts with
Customers and IFRS 9 Financial Instruments, which became effective on January 1, 2018.

F-43

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

12. Reserves (Continued)

Dividend distributions

GasLog’s dividend distributions for the years ended December 31,  2018, 2019 and 2020 are

presented in the following table:

Declaration date

Type of shares

Dividend
per share

Payment date

Amount paid

$
0.14
$0.546875
$
0.15
$0.546875
$
0.15
$0.546875
$
$0.546875
$

0.15
$
$0.546875
$
0.15
$0.546875
0.15
$
$0.546875
$
$0.546875
$

$
0.15
$0.546875
0.05
$
$0.546875
$
0.05
$0.546875
$
$0.546875

March 15,  2018
April 2,  2018
May 24, 2018
July 2, 2018
August  23, 2018
October 1,  2018

0.15 November 21, 2018

January 2,  2019

0.40 December 17, 2018

March 14,  2019
April 1,  2019
May 23, 2019
July 1, 2019
August  22, 2019
October 1,  2019

0.15 November 21,  2019

January 2,  2020

0.38 December 31, 2019

March 12,  2020
April 1,  2020
May 28, 2020
July 1, 2020
August  27, 2020
October 1,  2020

0.05 November 30,  2020

January 4, 2021

11,300
2,516
12,120
2,516
12,122
2,516
12,126
2,516
32,342

90,074

12,129
2,516
12,129
2,515
12,129
2,516
12,129
2,516
30,731

89,310

12,082
2,516
4,035
2,516
4,758
2,516
4,759
2,516

35,698

February 15, 2018
March 8, 2018
May 3, 2018
May 11, 2018
August  1, 2018
September 13, 2018
October 31, 2018
November 15, 2018
November 28, 2018

February 13, 2019
March 7, 2019
May 2, 2019
May 10, 2019
July 31, 2019
September 17, 2019
November 5, 2019
November 14, 2019
December 14, 2019

February 5, 2020
March 12, 2020
May 6, 2020
May 14, 2020
August  4, 2020
September 16, 2020
November 9, 2020
December 9, 2020

Common
Preference
Common
Preference
Common
Preference
Common
Preference
Common

Common
Preference
Common
Preference
Common
Preference
Common
Preference
Common

Common
Preference
Common
Preference
Common
Preference
Common
Preference

Total . . . . . . . . . . .

Total . . . . . . . . . . .

Total . . . . . . . . . . .

F-44

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

13. Borrowings

An analysis of the borrowings is as follows:

As of December 31,

2019

2020

Amounts due within one year
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Less: unamortized deferred loan/bond  issuance  costs . . . . . . .

268,090
(12,668)

258,262
(12,636)

Borrowings, current portion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

255,422

245,626

Amounts due after one year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Less: unamortized premium . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Less: unamortized deferred loan/bond  issuance  costs . . . . . . .

2,930,221
1,457
(39,705)

3,583,447
797
(56,649)

Borrowings, non-current portion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

2,891,973

3,527,595

Total

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

3,147,395

3,773,221

Loans

Terminated facilities:

(a) Citibank N.A., Nordea Bank Finland  plc, London Branch, DVB Bank America N.V.,  ABN  Amro
Bank N.V. (‘‘ABN’’), Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken AB (‘‘SEB’’) and BNP Paribas loan (Old
Partnership Facility, as defined below)

On November 12, 2014, GAS-three Ltd., GAS-four  Ltd., GAS-five Ltd., GAS-sixteen  Ltd.,
GAS-seventeen Ltd., GasLog Partners and GasLog  Partners  Holdings  LLC  entered into a loan
agreement with Citibank N.A., London Branch, acting as  security agent and trustee for and on  behalf
of the other finance parties mentioned above, for a credit facility for up  to $450,000 (the  ‘‘Old
Partnership Facility’’) for the purpose of  refinancing in full the existing  debt facilities. The agreement
provided for a single tranche that was drawn on  November 18, 2014. The credit facility bore  interest at
USD  London Interbank Offered Rate  (‘‘LIBOR’’) plus  a margin.  In February 2019,  the Partnership
signed a  debt refinancing of up to $450,000 with certain  financial  institutions  (refer to (b) in the
Existing facilities section), in order to refinance such indebtedness. On March  6, 2019, the  Partnership
used $354,375 drawn down under the  new  facility  to  prepay the outstanding debt of GAS-three Ltd.,
GAS-four Ltd., GAS-five Ltd., GAS-sixteen Ltd. and GAS-seventeen Ltd., which would have  been due
in November 2019. On March 7, 2019,  the Old  Partnership Facility was terminated and the respective
unamortized loan fees of $988 were written-off to profit  or loss.

(b)  ABN AMRO Bank N.V., DNB (UK) Ltd., DVB Bank America N.V.,  Commonwealth  Bank of
Australia, ING Bank N.V. (‘‘ING’’), London Branch, Credit Agricole Corporate and Investment Bank
and National Australia Bank Limited  loan  (Five Vessel Refinancing,  as defined  below)

On February 18, 2016, GAS-eighteen Ltd., GAS-nineteen Ltd., GAS-twenty Ltd., GAS-twenty
one Ltd. and GAS-twenty seven Ltd.  entered into a credit agreement to refinance the debt maturities
that were scheduled to become due in  2016 and 2017 (the ‘‘Five  Vessel Refinancing’’). The Five Vessel
Refinancing comprised a five-year senior  tranche  facility  of  up to $396,500  and a  two-year  bullet junior
tranche facility of up to $180,000. The  vessels covered  by  the Five Vessel Refinancing were the GasLog

F-45

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

13. Borrowings (Continued)

Partners-owned Methane Alison Victoria, Methane Shirley Elisabeth, Methane Heather Sally and Methane
Becki Anne and the GasLog-owned  Methane Lydon Volney.

On April 5, 2016, $395,450 and $179,750 under the senior and  junior tranche,  respectively, of the

Five Vessel Refinancing were drawn to  partially  refinance  $644,000 of the outstanding debt of
GAS-eighteen Ltd., GAS-nineteen Ltd.,  GAS-twenty  Ltd., GAS-twenty  one Ltd. and GAS-twenty
seven Ltd.. The balance of $68,800 was paid  from available cash. On  April 5,  2017, GasLog  prepaid
$150,000 under the junior tranche facility  agreement and on January 5, 2018, GasLog  Partners  prepaid
the outstanding balance of $29,750 under  the junior tranche facility agreement, which was subsequently
cancelled.

The aggregate balance outstanding under  the senior tranche  as of December 31, 2019 was

$289,709. Amounts drawn bore interest at  LIBOR plus  a margin.

On July 21, 2020, pursuant to the multiple credit  agreements entered into by the Group  to
refinance its existing indebtedness which  was  scheduled to become due in 2021  (refer to (e),  (f)  and
(g) in the Existing Facilities section), the  outstanding  balances  of  GAS-eighteen Ltd.,
GAS-nineteen Ltd., GAS-twenty Ltd., GAS-twenty one Ltd. and GAS-twenty seven Ltd., under  the
senior tranche totaling $265,911, were  fully  repaid. The existing loan  facilities  of the specified vessels
under the Five Vessel Refinancing were  terminated and the respective unamortized  loan fees of $1,183
were written-off to profit or loss. A few  days earlier,  $7,933 were repaid  in accordance with  the
repayment terms under the Five Vessel  Refinancing Facility  since the closing of the  refinancing was
delayed by approximately two weeks  due  to COVID-19.

(c) Citigroup Global Market Limited, Credit Suisse AG,  Nordea Bank AB, London Branch,
Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken AB (publ), HSBC Bank plc (‘‘HSBC’’), ING Bank N.V., London
Branch, Danmarks Skibskredit A/S,  Korea Development Bank and DVB Bank America N.V. loan
(Legacy Facility Refinancing, as defined  below)

On July 19, 2016, GAS-one Ltd., GAS-two Ltd., GAS-six Ltd., GAS-seven  Ltd.,  GAS-eight Ltd.,

GAS-nine Ltd., GAS-ten Ltd. and GAS-fifteen Ltd.  entered into a credit agreement with a  number of
international banks (the ‘‘Legacy Facility  Refinancing’’) to refinance the  existing indebtedness on eight
of GasLog’s on-the-water vessels of up to $1,050,000,  extending the  maturities of six existing credit
facilities to 2021. The vessels covered  by the  Legacy Facility Refinancing  are the GasLog-owned
GasLog Savannah, GasLog Singapore, GasLog Skagen, GasLog Saratoga, GasLog Salem and GasLog
Chelsea and the GasLog Partners owned the  GasLog Seattle and the Solaris.

The Legacy Facility Refinancing was comprised of a  five-year term loan facility of up to $950,000

and a revolving credit facility of up to $100,000. On  July 25, 2016, the available amount of  $950,000
under the term loan facility and $11,641 under the revolving credit facility were  drawn to refinance  the
aggregate existing indebtedness of $959,899 of  GAS-one Ltd.,  GAS-two Ltd., GAS-six Ltd.,
GAS-seven Ltd., GAS-eight Ltd., GAS-nine  Ltd., GAS-ten  Ltd.  and GAS-fifteen Ltd. Amounts  drawn
bore interest at LIBOR plus a margin.  On  January 17, 2017, $30,000 was drawn under the revolving
credit facility. On July 3, 2017, the full drawn amount of $41,641 under the  revolving credit facility was
repaid. On November 13, 2018, $25,940  was drawn  under the revolving credit facility, which was  repaid
on December 12, 2018.

F-46

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

13. Borrowings (Continued)

The balance outstanding as of December  31, 2019  was  $775,000 under  the term loan  facility  and $0
under the revolving credit facility. On February 13,  2020, March  13, 2020 and March 18,  2020, $23,346,
$50,714 and $25,940 were drawn under the revolving credit  facility.

On July 21, 2020, pursuant to the multiple  credit agreements entered into by the Group  to
refinance its existing indebtedness which  was scheduled to become due in 2021(refer to (e), (g) and
(h) in the Existing Facilities section),  the outstanding balances of  GAS-one Ltd., GAS-two Ltd.,
GAS-six Ltd., GAS-seven Ltd., GAS-eight Ltd., GAS-nine Ltd.  and  GAS-ten Ltd.,  under the term and
revolving credit facilities totaling $724,514 were  fully repaid. In  addition,  on August 3, 2020, the
outstanding balance of GAS-fifteen Ltd.  under the  term and revolving  credit facility of $92,153  was
fully repaid. The existing loan facilities of  the specified  vessels  under the Legacy  Facility  Refinancing
were terminated and the respective unamortized loan fees of $3,591  were  written-off  to  profit or  loss. A
few days  earlier, $25,875 were repaid in  accordance with the  repayment terms under  the Legacy Facility
Refinancing since the closing of the refinancing was delayed by  approximately two weeks due to
COVID-19.

Existing facilities:

(a) Citibank, N.A., London Branch, Nordea Bank AB, London  Branch, The Export-Import Bank of
Korea, Bank of America, National Association, BNP Paribas, Cr´edit Agricole Corporate and
Investment Bank,  Credit Suisse AG,  HSBC Bank plc, ING Bank N.V.,  London Branch, KEB HANA
Bank, London Branch, KfW IPEX-Bank GmbH, National Australia  Bank  Limited, Oversea-Chinese
Banking Corporation Limited, Soci´et´e G´en´erale and The Korea Development Bank loan (October 2015
Facility, as defined below)

On October 16, 2015, GAS-eleven Ltd.,  GAS-twelve Ltd.,  GAS-thirteen Ltd., GAS-fourteen Ltd.,

GAS-twenty two Ltd., GAS-twenty three  Ltd., GAS-twenty four Ltd. and GAS-twenty five Ltd. entered
into a debt financing agreement with 14 international  banks (‘‘October  2015 Facility’’) for $1,311,356 to
partially finance the delivery of the eight  newbuildings expected to be delivered in 2016, 2018 and 2019.
The financing is backed by the Export  Import  Bank of Korea (‘‘KEXIM’’) and the Korea Trade
Insurance Corporation (‘‘K-Sure’’), who  are either directly lending or providing  cover for over 60%  of
the facility.

The loan agreement provides for four tranches of $412,458, $201,094,  $206,115 and $491,690. The
facility is also sub-divided into eight loans,  one loan per newbuilding vessel, to be provided for each of
the vessels on a pro rata basis under each of the four tranches. Each drawing under the  first  three
tranches shall be repaid in 24 consecutive semi-annual equal installments commencing six  months after
the actual delivery of the relevant vessel according to a 12-year profile. Each drawing under the fourth
tranche shall be repaid in 20 consecutive  semi-annual  equal installments commencing six  months after
the actual delivery of the relevant vessel according to a 20-year profile, with  a balloon payment
together with the final installment. On  March  22,  2016 and June 24, 2016, $162,967 was drawn down on
each  date with respect to the deliveries of  the GasLog Greece and the GasLog Glasgow, on
September 26, 2016 and October 25,  2016, $160,697 was drawn down  on each date with  respect to the
deliveries of the GasLog Geneva and the GasLog Gibraltar, on January 2, 2018 and March 14, 2018,
$166,210 was drawn on each date with respect to the  deliveries  of the GasLog Houston and the GasLog

F-47

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

13. Borrowings (Continued)

Hong Kong, while on March 23, 2018 and March  11, 2019, $165,805 was  drawn down on  each date with
respect to the deliveries of the  GasLog Genoa and the GasLog Gladstone. Amounts drawn bear interest
at LIBOR plus a margin.

On October 21, 2020, the outstanding indebtedness of GAS-twenty  five  Ltd., in the  amount  of
$136,776 was prepaid pursuant to the sale and leaseback  agreement  entered into with CMB Financial
Leasing Co. Ltd. (‘‘CMBFL’’) (refer below). The relevant tranches of the loan agreement were
terminated and the respective unamortized  loan fees of $3,571 were  written-off to profit  or loss.  The
aggregate balance outstanding under  the loan facility as of December 31,  2020 is $873,776
(December 31, 2019: $1,103,442).

(b)  Credit Suisse AG, Nordea Bank Abp,  filial I Norge and Iyo  Bank Ltd., Singapore Branch (2019
Partnership Facility, as defined below)

On February 20, 2019, GAS-three Ltd.,  GAS-four Ltd., GAS-five Ltd., GAS-sixteen Ltd.,

GAS-seventeen Ltd., GasLog Partners and GasLog Partners  Holdings  LLC  entered into a loan
agreement with Credit Suisse AG, Nordea Bank Abp, filial I Norge and Iyo Bank Ltd., Singapore
Branch, each an original lender and Nordea acting  as security  agent and trustee for and on  behalf of
the other finance parties mentioned  above,  for a  credit facility  of up to $450,000 (the  ‘‘2019 Partnership
Facility’’) for the purpose of refinancing  in full the  Old Partnership Facility described above.
Subsequently, on the same date, the  Development Bank of Japan, Inc. entered  the facility as lender  via
transfer certificate. The vessels covered  by the 2019 Partnership Facility are the  GasLog Shanghai, the
GasLog Santiago, the GasLog Sydney, the Methane Rita Andrea and the Methane Jane Elizabeth.

The agreement provides for an amortizing revolving credit facility which  can be repaid  and

redrawn at any time, subject to the outstanding amount immediately after any drawdown  not  exceeding
(i) 75%  of the aggregate of the market values of all vessels under the agreement, or  (ii) the  total
facility amount. The total facility amount reduces  in 20 equal  quarterly amounts of $7,357,  with a final
balloon amount of up to $302,860, together  with the last quarterly  reduction in February 2024. The
credit facility bears interest at LIBOR plus  a margin.  On March  6, 2019, the  Partnership drew  down
$360,000 under the 2019 Partnership  Facility, out  of which $354,375 was used to prepay the outstanding
debt under the Old Partnership Facility, which would have been due in  November 2019.  On April 1,
2019, the Partnership drew down an additional  $75,000 under the 2019 Partnership Facility. The
aggregate balance outstanding as of December 31, 2020  is $398,501  (December 31, 2019: $425,949),
with no amount available to be redrawn as  of December  31, 2020 (December 31, 2019: $1,980).

(c) ABN AMRO BANK N.V. and Oversea-Chinese  Banking Corporation Limited (‘‘OCBC’’) (GasLog
Warsaw Facility, as defined below)

On June 25, 2019, GasLog Hellas-1 Special Maritime Enterprise entered into a  loan agreement

with ABN AMRO BANK N.V. and OCBC,  for the financing of the  GasLog Warsaw, which was
delivered on July 31, 2019 (the ‘‘GasLog  Warsaw Facility’’). The agreement provides for  a single
tranche of $129,500 that was drawn on  July  25, 2019  and is repayable in 28 equal quarterly installments
of $1,619 each and a final balloon payment of $84,175  payable concurrently with the last  quarterly
installment in June 2026. The loan bears  interest at LIBOR plus  a  margin. The balance outstanding as
of December 31, 2020 is $121,406 (December 31,  2019: $127,881).

F-48

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

13. Borrowings (Continued)

(d) Citibank, N.A., London Branch, DNB (UK) Ltd., Skandinaviska Enskilda  Banken  AB  (publ), The
Export-Import Bank of Korea, Bank  of America, National Association, BNP  Paribas, Seoul Branch,
Commonwealth Bank of Australia, KfW IPEX-Bank GmbH, National  Australia Bank Limited, Oversea-
Chinese  Banking Corporation Limited, Soci´et´e G´en´erale, Standard Chartered Bank (‘‘SCB’’), The
Korea Development Bank and KB Kookmin Bank  (7xNB  Facility, as  defined below)

On December 12, 2019, GAS-twenty  eight Ltd., GAS-thirty Ltd., GAS-thirty one  Ltd.,  GAS-thirty

two Ltd., GAS-thirty three Ltd., GAS-thirty four Ltd.  and GAS-thirty five Ltd. entered into a  loan
agreement (the ‘‘7xNB Facility’’) with 13 international banks, with Citibank N.A.  London  Branch and
DNB Bank ASA, London Branch acting as agents  on behalf  of the other finance parties. The financing
is backed by KEXIM and K-Sure, who are either  directly lending or  providing cover for  over 60% of
the facility. The agreement of up to $1,052,791 partially finances the  delivery of seven newbuildings
scheduled to be delivered in 2020 and 2021.  The loan agreement provides for four tranches  of
$176,547, $174,787, $356,671 and $344,786. The facility is also sub-divided into seven loans,  one loan
per  newbuilding vessel, to be provided  for  each of the  vessels  on a pro rata basis under  each of the
four  tranches. Each drawing under the first and the third tranche  are combined  and repaid in 24
consecutive semi-annual equal instalments commencing six months after  the actual delivery  of the
relevant vessel according to an average 12-year profile. Each drawing under the second tranche is
repaid in 14 consecutive semi-annual equal instalments  commencing  six months  after the actual  delivery
of the relevant vessel according to an average 7-year profile. Each drawing under the fourth tranche is
repaid in a single bullet seven years after  the actual  delivery of the relevant vessel.

On March 26, 2020, on May 7, 2020,  on July 9, 2020, on November  12, 2020  and on December  29,

2020, $152,525, $149,386, $149,281, $147,845 and $147,845, respectively, was drawn  down with respect
to the deliveries of the GasLog Windsor, the GasLog Wales, the GasLog Westminster, the GasLog
Georgetown and the GasLog Galveston (delivered on January 4, 2021 (Note 30)). The  aggregate balance
outstanding under the loan facility as of  December 31, 2020 is $738,422 (December 31, 2019: $0).
Amounts drawn bear interest at LIBOR  plus  a margin.

As of December 31, 2020, commitment,  underwriting and legal fees of $4,658 (December 31, 2019:

$11,592) for obtaining the undrawn portion of the  financing are  classified under Deferred financing
costs in the statement of financial position and are netted off debt  on the respective drawdown dates.

(e) BNP  Paribas, Credit Suisse AG and Alpha Bank S.A.  (GasLog Partners $260.3M Facility,  as
defined below)

On July 16, 2020, GasLog Partners entered  into  a credit agreement of $260,331  (the ‘‘GasLog
Partners  $260.3M Facility’’) with BNP  Paribas, Credit Suisse AG and Alpha Bank  S.A.,  each an original
lender, with BNP Paribas acting as security agent and trustee for  and on behalf of the other  finance
parties mentioned above, in order to refinance the existing indebtedness due in  2021 on  three of its
vessels. The facility will amortize over  ten equal  semi-annual installments of $8,597 beginning in
January 2021, with a final balloon amount  of $174,361 payable  concurrently  with the last installment in
July 2025. Interest on the facility will be payable  at a  rate of LIBOR plus a margin.  An amount of
$260,331 was drawn on July 21, 2020,  out of which $258,532 was used to refinance the  outstanding
indebtedness  of GAS-twenty Ltd., GAS-seven Ltd. and GAS-eight Ltd., the  respective entities owning

F-49

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

13. Borrowings (Continued)

the Methane Shirley Elisabeth, the GasLog Seattle and the Solaris. The balance outstanding as of
December 31, 2020 is $260,331.

(f) DNB  Bank ASA, London Branch,  and ING  Bank N.V., London Branch (GasLog Partners $193.7M
Facility, as defined below)

On July 16, 2020, GasLog Partners entered into a credit agreement of $193,713  (the ‘‘GasLog

Partners  $193.7M Facility’’) with DNB Bank  ASA, London Branch,  and ING  Bank N.V.,  London
Branch, each an original lender, with DNB Bank  ASA, London  Branch acting as security  agent and
trustee for and on behalf of the other  finance party mentioned above,  in order  to  refinance the  existing
indebtedness  due in 2021 on three of  its  vessels.  The  facility will amortize over ten  equal semi-annual
installments of $8,599 beginning in January  2021, with a  final balloon  amount  of $107,723 payable
concurrently with the last installment  in July 2025.  Interest on the facility will be payable at a  rate of
LIBOR plus a margin. An amount of $193,713 was drawn down on  July  21, 2020, out of which
$174,867 was used to refinance the outstanding indebtedness of GAS-nineteen Ltd., GAS-twenty
one Ltd. and GAS-twenty seven Ltd.,  the respective  entities  owning the  Methane Alison Victoria, the
Methane Heather Sally and the Methane Becki Anne. The balance outstanding as of December 31, 2020
is $193,713.

(g) ABN AMRO Bank N.V., Citigroup  Global Markets Limited  and Nordea Bank  ABP, Filial I Norge,
HSBC Bank plc, Credit Agricole Corporate and  Investment Bank, Unicredit  Bank AG and  National
Bank of Australia Limited (GasLog $576.9M Facility, as defined  below)

On July 16, 2020 GAS-one Ltd., GAS-two Ltd., GAS-six Ltd., GAS-nine Ltd.,  GAS-ten Ltd., and
GAS-eighteen Ltd. entered into a credit  agreement of  $576,888  (the ‘‘GasLog $576.9M  Facility’’) with
ABN AMRO Bank N.V., Citigroup Global Markets Limited and Nordea Bank ABP,  Filial I  Norge
acting as global co-ordinators and bookrunners, while HSBC Bank plc acting as mandated lead
arranger; Credit Agricole Corporate and  Investment Bank acting as lead arranger and Unicredit Bank
AG  and National Bank of Australia Limited acting as arrangers,  each of those being an original lender.
The credit agreement was entered to refinance the existing indebtedness  due  in 2021 of six of the
Group’s vessels. ABN AMRO Bank N.V. was appointed by the other finance parties in this  syndicate as
security agent and trustee. The facility comprises of  a $494,475 Term Loan  Facility which amortizes
over 18 equal quarterly installments of  $9,349 beginning in April 2021 (following an  initial repayment in
January 2021 in the amount of $18,698), with a final  balloon amount of $307,495 payable concurrently
with the last installment in June 2025  and  a $82,413  revolving loan  facility  which also  matures  in June
2025. The facility bears interest at LIBOR  plus  a margin. An amount of $576,888 was drawn  on
July 21, 2020, out of which $557,026 was  used to refinance the outstanding indebtedness of
GAS-one Ltd., GAS-two Ltd., GAS-six  Ltd.,  GAS-nine  Ltd., GAS-ten Ltd., and GAS-eighteen Ltd., the
respective entities owning the GasLog Savannah, the GasLog Singapore, the GasLog Skagen, the
GasLog Saratoga, the GasLog Salem and the Methane Lydon Volney. The balance of the proceeds was
used for general corporate and working  capital purposes. The  balance  outstanding under the term and
revolving loan facility as of December 31,  2020 is $494,475  and $82,413,  respectively.

F-50

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

13. Borrowings (Continued)

(h) National Bank of Greece S.A. (‘‘NBG’’) (GasLog  Chelsea  $96.8M Facility, as defined  below)

On July 30, 2020, GasLog-fifteen Ltd.  entered into a credit agreement of $96,815 (the  ‘‘GasLog

Chelsea $96.8M Facility’’) with National  Bank of Greece S.A. for the refinancing of GAS-fifteen Ltd.,
the entity owning the GasLog Chelsea. National Bank of Greece S.A. is acting as the  sole original
lender. An amount of $96,815 was drawn  on July 31,  2020, out of which $92,153 was used  to  refinance
the outstanding indebtedness of the  GasLog Chelsea. The balance of the proceeds was used for general
corporate and working capital purposes.  The facility amortizes over 20  equal quarterly installments of
$1,891 beginning in October 2020, with  a  final balloon amount of $58,995  payable concurrently  with the
last instalment in July 2025. The loan bears interest at LIBOR plus  a margin.  The  balance  outstanding
as of  December 31, 2020 is $94,923.

(i) CMB Financial Leasing Co. Ltd.  (GasLog Hong Kong  SLB, as defined below)

On October 21, 2020, GasLog refinanced  through a sale-and-leaseback  transaction the  GasLog
Hong Kong, a 174,000 cbm LNG carrier with X-DF  propulsion built in  2018. GasLog  sold the vessel to
an indirectly owned subsidiary of CMB  Financial Leasing Co. Ltd. the  (‘‘GasLog Hong  Kong SLB’’),
raising $163,406 and leased it back under a bareboat charter  for a period of twelve years. At the  end of
the period, GasLog has the option to buy the vessel for $70,000  otherwise a premium of $30,000 will be
payable. GasLog can also buy back the vessel  at any time by  paying the capital  outstanding and a
prepayment fee where applicable. The  amount  drawn was used to refinance the outstanding
indebtedness  of GAS-twenty five Ltd.,  in  the amount of $136,776.  The  amount  drawn  on October 21,
2020 is repayable in 48 quarterly installments, the  first  20 installments amount to $2,670  each  and the
following 28 installments amount to $1,429 each,  and  a final balloon payment of $70,000 payable
concurrently with the last quarterly installment in October 2032.  Interest on  the outstanding capital  of
the bareboat charter will be payable at a rate of LIBOR plus a margin. GasLog has the option to
repurchase the vessel and as a result under  IFRS 15, the  transfer  of the vessel does not qualify as a
sale and  leaseback. The Company did  not derecognize  the respective vessel from its balance sheet and
accounted for the amount received under  the sale-and-leaseback transaction as a  financial  liability.  The
balance outstanding as of December  31, 2020 is  $163,406.

Securities covenants and guarantees

The obligations under the aforementioned facilities are secured by a first priority  mortgage over

the vessels, a pledge or negative pledge  of the  share capital of  the respective vessel owning  companies
and a first priority assignment of earnings  and  insurance related  to  the vessels, including charter
revenue, management revenue and any insurance and requisition compensation. Obligations under the
2019 Partnership Facility, the GasLog Partners $260.3M Facility and the GasLog  Partners $193.7M
Facility are facilities guaranteed by the  Partnership  and GasLog Partners Holdings LLC, obligations
under the October 2015 Facility are guaranteed by the Partnership and  GasLog Partners Holdings LLC
for up to the value of the commitments relating to the GasLog Greece, the GasLog Geneva, the GasLog
Glasgow and the GasLog Gibraltar and by GasLog and GasLog Carriers  for up to the value of  the
commitments on the remaining vessels, while obligations under the GasLog Warsaw Facility, the 7xNB
Facility, the GasLog $576.9M Facility  and the GasLog Chelsea $96.8M Facility are guaranteed  by
GasLog and GasLog Carriers. The facilities include customary respective  covenants, and  among  other

F-51

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

13. Borrowings (Continued)

restrictions the facilities include a fair market value  covenant pursuant to which the majority lenders
may request additional security under the facilities if the aggregate fair market value  of the collateral
vessels (without taking into account any  charter  arrangements) were to fall  below 120% of the
aggregate outstanding principal balance  (with respect to the GasLog Partners $193.7M  Facility below
130% of the aggregate outstanding principal balance plus any hedging exposure  and with respect to
each  individual vessel in the October 2015  Facility  and the  7xNB Facility, below 115% of the
outstanding principal balance of that  vessel  for the  first  two  years  after each drawdown and  below
120% at any time thereafter). In respect  to  the CMB Financial Leasing transaction the minimum value
threshold is 100%. In addition, under  the facilities, the respective  vessel-owning entities  are also
required to maintain at all times minimum liquidity of  $1,500 per entity ($5,500 for GAS-twenty Ltd.
and the equivalent of the next hire payment or $3,843 as of December 31, 2020 for GAS-twenty
five Ltd.) and are in compliance as of  December 31, 2020. The Group  is in compliance with the
required minimum security coverage  as  of  December  31, 2020.

Bonds

On June 27, 2016, GasLog also completed  the issuance of Norwegian  Kroner (‘‘NOK’’) 750,000
(equivalent to $90,150) of new senior unsecured bonds (the ‘‘NOK 2021  Bonds’’) in  the Norwegian
bond market. The NOK 2021 Bonds were  due to mature in May 2021 and have  a coupon of 6.9%  over
three-month Norwegian Interbank Offered Rate (‘‘NIBOR’’). On November 27, 2019, GasLog
repurchased and cancelled NOK 316,000  of the  outstanding NOK 2021 Bonds at a price  of 104.75% of
par value, resulting in a loss of $1,644.

On January 31, 2020, GasLog repurchased and cancelled NOK 434,000 of  the outstanding NOK

2021 Bonds at a price of 104.0% of par  value, resulting in  a  loss of  $1,937. The aforementioned
repurchase was considered an extinguishment of the existing NOK 2021  Bonds,  and as a result,  the
unamortized bond fees of $316 were written off  to  profit or  loss for the year ended  December 31,  2020.

On March 22, 2017, GasLog closed a public offering of $250,000 aggregate principal amount of the

8.875% Senior Notes at a public offering  price of 100%  of the principal amount. On  May 16,  2019,
GasLog closed a follow-on issue of $75,000 aggregate principal amount of the  8.875% Senior Notes
priced at 102.5% of par with a yield  to  maturity of 7.89%. The gross  proceeds  from this offering  were
$76,875, including a $1,875 premium. In addition,  GasLog paid $10,000 for the partial exchange  of  the
outstanding 8.875% Senior Notes at a price of 104.75% of par value, resulting in  a loss  of $475 for the
year ended December 31, 2019. The  exchange was  completed on  January 13,  2020. The carrying
amount under the 8.875% Senior Notes, net of unamortized  financing costs  and premium as of
December 31, 2020, was $313,773 (December 31,  2019: $322,938).

Interest payment on the 8.875% Senior Notes is made in arrears on a quarterly  basis. GasLog may

redeem the 8.875% Senior Notes, in  whole or in  part,  at any time  and from time  to  time at a
redemption price equal to the greater  of  (a) 100%  of the principal amount of such notes  and (b) the
sum of the present values of the remaining scheduled payments  of principal and interest thereon
(exclusive of interest accrued to but  excluding  the date of redemption),  computed using  a discount rate
equal to the applicable treasury rate plus 50 basis  points, plus accrued and unpaid  interest  thereon to
the date of redemption.

F-52

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

13. Borrowings (Continued)

On November 27, 2019, GasLog completed  the issuance of NOK 900,000 (equivalent to $98,550)

of new senior unsecured bonds (the ‘‘NOK  2024 Bonds’’)  in the Norwegian bond market. The NOK
2024 Bonds mature in November 2024 and bear  interest  at  NIBOR plus margin. Interest  payments are
made in arrears on a quarterly basis. GasLog may redeem  the aforementioned  bond in whole or in  part
as from May 2024 at 101% of par plus  accrued interests  on the  redeemed amount.

The carrying amount under the NOK 2024 Bonds, net  of  unamortized financing costs and

unamortized premium, as of December 31, 2020  was  $104,017 (carrying amount under the NOK 2021
Bonds and the NOK 2024 Bonds as of  December 31,  2019: $149,433)  while their fair value was $96,581
based on a USD/NOK exchange rate  of 0.1170 as  of December  31, 2020 (December 31, 2019: $157,383,
based on a USD/NOK exchange rate  of 0.1134).

Corporate guarantor financial covenants

GasLog Partners’ financial covenants

GasLog Partners as corporate guarantor for the  2019 Partnership Facility,  the GasLog Partners

$260.3M Facility, the GasLog Partners $193.7M Facility and for the debt of the  vessels  owned by
GasLog Partners under the October 2015 Facility is subject to specified  financial  covenants on  a
consolidated basis. These financial covenants include the following:

(i)

the aggregate amount of cash and cash  equivalents,  short-term investments and available
undrawn facilities with remaining maturities  of  at least  six months (excluding  loans from
affiliates) must be at least $45,000;

(ii) total indebtedness divided by total assets must  be  less  than 65.0%;

(iii) the Partnership is permitted to declare or pay any distributions, subject to no event  of default

having occurred or occurring as a consequence of the payment of such distributions.

The 2019 Partnership Facility, the GasLog  Partners  $260.3M Facility, the  GasLog Partners  $193.7M

Facility and the October 2015 Facility  also  impose  certain restrictions  relating  to  GasLog Partners,
including restrictions that limit its ability to make any substantial  change in  the nature of its business or
to change the corporate structure without  approval from the  lenders.

Compliance with the financial covenants  is required on  a semi-annual  basis. GasLog  Partners  was

in compliance with the respective financial covenants as of December 31, 2020.

GasLog’s financial covenants

GasLog, as corporate guarantor for the  loan facilities (except for the 2019 Partnership Facility, the

GasLog Partners $260.3M Facility, the  GasLog  Partners $193.7M Facility  and the  debt  of  the vessels
owned by GasLog Partners under the  October  2015 Facility) and  NOK 2024 Bonds, is  subject to
specified financial covenants on a consolidated basis.

These financial covenants include the following:

(i) net working capital (excluding the current portion of long-term  debt) must be not less than $0;

F-53

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

13. Borrowings (Continued)

(ii) total indebtedness divided by total assets must  not  exceed  75.0%;

(iii) the aggregate amount of all unencumbered cash and cash equivalents must be at  least  $75,000;

(iv) the ratio of EBITDA over debt service  obligations  (including interest and debt  repayments) on
a trailing twelve-month basis must be not less than 1.10:1 provided  that such covenant is not
applicable as long as all unencumbered cash  and  cash equivalent are  not  less  than $110,000;

(v)

the market value adjusted net worth  of GasLog must at all times be not less than $350,000;
and

(vi) GasLog is permitted to pay dividends,  subject to no  event of default having  occurred or

occurring as a consequence of the payment of  such dividends.

The credit facilities also impose certain  restrictions relating to GasLog, including restrictions  that

limit its ability to make any substantial  change  in the nature  of  its  business  or to engage in  transactions
that would constitute a change of control,  as defined  in the relevant credit facilities, without repaying
all of the Group’s indebtedness in full, or to allow the  Group’s largest  shareholders to reduce  their
shareholding in GasLog below specified  thresholds.

In addition, the terms of the NOK 2024 Bonds include a dividend restriction according to which

GasLog may not (i) declare or make  any  dividend  payment or distribution, whether in cash or in kind,
(ii) re-purchase any of the Group’s shares  or undertake other  similar transactions (including,  but not
limited to, total return swaps related to the  Group’s shares),  or  (iii) grant any loans or  make other
distributions or transactions constituting a  transfer  of  value  to  the Group’s shareholders (items (i),
(ii) and (iii) collectively referred to as  the ‘‘Distributions’’) that  in aggregate  exceed during  any calendar
year $1.10/share. Notwithstanding the foregoing, GasLog may make any amount of Distributions, so
long as the Group’s cash and cash equivalents  and short-term investments exceed $150,000, provided
that GasLog can demonstrate, by delivering a compliance certificate  to  the bond trustee, that no  event
of default is continuing or would result  from  such Distributions.

GasLog, as corporate guarantor for the  8.875% Senior Notes, is  subject to specified financial

covenants on a consolidated basis.

The financial covenants include the following:

(i) net working capital (excluding the current portion of long-term  debt) must be not less than $0;

(ii) total indebtedness plus total equity divided by  total assets must not exceed 75.0%;

(iii) the ratio of EBITDA over debt service obligations as defined in the respective  credit facilities
and the GasLog guarantees (including interest and debt repayments) on a trailing twelve
months’ basis must be not less than 100.0%;

(iv) the aggregate amount of all unencumbered cash and  cash  equivalents must be not less than

the higher of 2.5% of total indebtedness or $35,000  after the first drawdown; and

(v)

the Group’s market value adjusted net  worth must at  all times  be  not  less  than $300,000.

F-54

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

13. Borrowings (Continued)

Compliance with the loan financial covenants is  required on a  semi-annual basis while compliance
with the NOK 2024 Bonds and the 8.875% Senior Notes covenants is required  at all times. The Group
was in compliance with all financial covenants as of  December  31, 2020.

Debt Repayment Schedule

The maturity table below reflects the principal repayments of the loans, the sale-and-leaseback
transaction, the NOK 2024 Bonds and  the  8.875% Senior Notes outstanding as  of December  31, 2020
based on the repayment schedule of  the respective loan facilities  (as described above):

Not later than one year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Later than one year and not later than three years . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Later than three years and not later  than  five  years . . . . . . . . . . . .
Later than five years . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

258,262
812,825
1,574,258
1,196,364

3,841,709

As of
December 31, 2020

The weighted average interest rate for the outstanding  loan facilities and bonds for the year ended

December 31, 2020 was 3.72% (December 31, 2019: 5.05%) excluding  the fixed interest  rate for the
interest rate swaps where hedge accounting is  not  applicable (Note 26).

After excluding the unamortized deferred  loan issuance costs  the carrying amount of  the Group’s

bank debt recognized in the consolidated  financial statements approximates its  fair value since the debt
bears interest at a  variable interest rate.

14. Other Payables and Accruals

An analysis of other payables and accruals is as  follows:

Unearned revenue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Accrued off-hire . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Accrued purchases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Accrued interest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Other accruals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

As of December 31,

2019

2020

48,183
6,968
9,759
36,746
34,586

59,612
5,886
9,867
33,600
34,092

Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

136,242

143,057

The unearned revenue represents charter  hires received in advance in December 2020 relating to

the hire period of January 2021 for 29 vessels (December 2019: 22 vessels).

F-55

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

15. Vessel Operating and Supervision  Costs

An analysis of vessel operating and supervision costs is as follows:

For the year ended
December 31,

2018

2019

2020

Crew wages and vessel management employee costs . .
Technical maintenance expenses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Other vessel operating expenses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

79,624
28,694
19,766

80,713
37,653
21,296

89,463
39,369
19,403

Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

128,084

139,662

148,235

16. Voyage Expenses and Commissions

An analysis of voyage expenses and commissions is as  follows:

For the year ended
December 31,

2018

2019

2020

Brokers’ commissions on revenue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Bunkers’ consumption and other voyage expenses . . . . . . .

7,555
12,819

7,527
16,245

7,050
14,833

Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

20,374

23,772

21,883

Bunkers’ consumption and other voyage expenses represent  mainly bunkers  consumed during

vessels’ unemployment and off-hire (including bunkers consumed during dry-docking).

17. General and Administrative Expenses

An analysis of general and administrative expenses is as  follows:

For the year ended
December 31,

2018

2019

2020

Employee costs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Share-based compensation (Note 22) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Other expenses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

20,980
5,216
15,797

24,863
5,107
17,415

24,051
5,486
17,712

Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

41,993

47,385

47,249

General and administrative expenses  include  restructuring costs  comprising of termination benefits,

accelerated amortization for stock plan and restructuring  obligation, of $5,312  for the  year ended
December 31, 2020 ($4,702 for the year ended  December 31, 2019) pursuant to management’s decision
to relocate more of its employees including several  members  of  senior management to the Piraeus,
Greece office and to close the Stamford,  Connecticut office.

F-56

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

18. Revenues from Contracts with Customers

The Group has recognized the following  amounts  relating  to  revenues:

Revenues from long-term fleet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Revenues from spot fleet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Revenues from The Cool Pool Limited (GasLog

For the year ended
December 31,

2018

2019

2020

476,415
38,909

508,778
113,822

462,887
210,390

vessels) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Revenues from vessel management services . . . . . . . . .

102,253
767

45,253
784

—
812

Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

618,344

668,637

674,089

Revenues from The Cool Pool Limited relate only to the pool revenues received from  GasLog’s
vessels operating in the Cool Pool and  do  not  include  the Net pool allocation to GasLog  of ($4,264)
for the year ended December 31, 2019  and $17,818 for  the year ended December 31, 2018,  which is
recorded  as a separate line item in the  Profit or Loss  Statement.

Management allocates vessel revenues to two  categories: a) spot fleet and b) long-term fleet, which

reflects its commercial strategy. Specifically, the spot fleet category contains all vessels  that  have
contracts with initial duration of less  than five years. The long-term  fleet  category  contains all vessels
that have charter party agreements with  initial  duration of more  than  five  years.  Both  categories,
exclude optional periods.

19. Financial Income and Costs

An analysis of financial income and costs is as follows:

Financial Income
Interest income . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Total financial income . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Financial Costs
Amortization and write-off of deferred  loan/bond

issuance costs/premium . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Interest expense on loans . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Interest expense on bonds and realized loss on CCSs . .
Lease charge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Loss arising on bond repurchases at a premium

For the year ended
December 31,

2018

2019

2020

4,784

4,784

5,318

5,318

726

726

12,593
111,600
30,029
10,520

14,154
122,819
34,607
10,506

22,876
93,860
35,891
9,921

(Note 13) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Other financial costs, net . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

—
1,885

2,119
6,276

1,937
796

Total financial costs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

166,627

190,481

165,281

F-57

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

20. Contingencies

Various claims, suits and complaints,  including those involving  government regulations, arise in the

ordinary course of the shipping business.  In addition, losses may arise from disputes with charterers,
environmental claims, agents and insurers and from claims with suppliers  relating  to  the operations of
the Group’s vessels. Currently, management is not aware  of  any such claims or  contingent liabilities
requiring disclosure in the consolidated financial statements.

21. Related Party Transactions

The Group had the following balances with related parties which  have been included in  the

consolidated statements of financial position:

Current  Assets

Dividends receivable and other amounts due from related  parties

Dividends receivable from associate (Note 5) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Other receivables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Total

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Current  Liabilities

Amounts due to related parties

Ship management creditors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Amounts due to related parties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

As of
December 31,

2019

2020

450
123

573

1,250
9

1,259

As of
December 31,

2019

328
200

2020

124
164

Ship management creditors’ liability comprises cash collected from Egypt  LNG Shipping Ltd. to

cover the obligations of its vessel under  the Group’s  management.

Amounts due to related parties of $164  as of December 31, 2020 (December 31, 2019: $200) are
expenses paid by a related party on behalf  of the Group and  payables to other related parties for the
office lease and other operating expenses.

F-58

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

21. Related Party Transactions (Continued)

The Group had the following transactions  with related parties  which have been included  in the

consolidated statements of profit or loss for  the years ended December  31, 2018,  2019 and 2020:

Company

Details

(a) Egypt  LNG  Shipping  Ltd.
. Vessel  management services
. Sale of  office property
(a) Egypt  LNG Shipping Ltd.
(b) Nea  Dimitra  Property . . . . Office  rent and utilities
(b) Nea  Dimitra  Property . . . . Office  rent
(b) Nea  Dimitra  Property . . . . Other  office services
(c) Seres S.A.
(c) Seres S.A.
(d) Chartwell  Management Inc. Travel expenses
(e) Ceres Monaco S.A.M.
(e) Ceres Monaco S.A.M.
(f) A.S. Papadimitriou and

. . . . . . . . . . . Catering services
. . . . . . . . . . . Consultancy services

. . . . Professional services
. . . . Travel expenses

Statement of
income account

Revenues
Loss on  disposal  of  non-current assets
General and  administrative  expenses
Financial  costs/Depreciation
General  and administrative expenses
General  and  administrative  expenses
General and administrative expenses
General  and administrative expenses
General  and  administrative  expenses
General and  administrative  expenses

2018

2019

2020

(703)
—
934
—
—
372
56
—
144
—

(703) (703)
— 572
478
411
669
642
1
1
268
361
56
55
23
284
144
144
1
13

Partners Law Firm . . . . . Professional services
(g) The Cool Pool Limited . . . Pool gross revenues
(g) The Cool Pool Limited . . . Pool gross bunkers
(g) The Cool Pool Limited . . . Pool other voyage expenses
(g) The Cool Pool Limited . . . Adjustment for net pool allocation Net pool allocation
(h) Ceres Shipping Ltd.
(h) Ceres Shipping Ltd.

. . . . . Travel expenses
. . . . . Professional services

General  and  administrative  expenses
Revenues
Voyage expenses and commissions
Voyage  expenses and  commissions

General and administrative  expenses
General and administrative expenses

4

— —
(102,253) (45,253) —
7,255 —
831 —
4,264 —
—
1
10 —

8,908
1,246
(17,818)
38
—

(a)

(b)

(c)

(d)

(e)

(f)

(g)

(h)

(i)

One  of  the  Group’s subsidiaries, GasLog LNG Services Ltd. provides vessel management services to Egypt LNG Shipping Ltd.,
the LNG vessel owning company, in which another  subsidiary,  GasLog  Shipping  Company  Ltd.,  holds  a 25%  ownership  interest.
In addition, in June 2020, GasLog LNG Services Ltd.  agreed to sell a low-pressure  turbine  to  Egypt LNG  Shipping Ltd.  to  be
installed  on the Methane Nile Eagle. The disposal resulted in a loss of $572 (Note  6).

Through its subsidiary GasLog LNG Services Ltd.,  the  Group  leases  office space in Piraeus, Greece,  from an  entity  controlled
by Ceres Shipping, Nea Dimitra Ktimatikh Kai Emporikh S.A.

GasLog LNG Services Ltd. has also entered into an agreement  with Seres S.A., an entity  controlled by the Livanos  family, for
the latter to provide catering services to the staff  based  in the Piraeus office. Amounts  paid pursuant to the agreement  are
generally  less than Euro 10 per person  per day,but  are slightly higher on special  occasions. In  addition,  GasLog LNG
Services  Ltd. has entered into an agreement  with  Seres S.A. for  the  latter to  provide  human  resources, telephone and
documentation services for the staff based  in Piraeus.

Chartwell Management Inc. is an entity controlled by  the Livanos family which provides travel services to  GasLog’s directors  and
officers.

GasLog entered into a consulting agreement for the services  of  an employee  of Ceres Monaco S.A.M., an entity controlled by
the Livanos family, for consultancy services in connection  with the acquisition  of  GasLog’s shareholding in Gastrade.  GasLog
agreed  to pay a fixed fee for work carried out between  May 1, 2016 and December 31,  2017 in  the  sum of  $100 and a
consultancy arrangement fee of $12 per month up to December  31, 2020.

A.S.  Papadimitriou and Partners Law Firm, an entity controlled by  one of  our directors,  provided legal  services  in relation to the
legal due  diligence process of our investment in Gastrade. For the years ended December  31, 2019 and 2020, no amount was
recognized in general and administrative expenses.  (December 31,  2018: $4).

GasLog recognized gross revenues and total voyage  expenses of $45,253 and  $8,086,  respectively, from the operation of  its
vessels in  the Cool Pool during the year ended December  31, 2019  (December  31, 2018: $102,253 and $10,154, respectively). The
aforementioned pool results were adjusted by a net  loss of  $4,264  (2018: net gain of  $17,818) to include the net allocation from
the pool  in  accordance with the profit sharing terms specified in the Pool  Agreement.

Ceres  Shipping Ltd., an entity controlled  by the Livanos family,  requested reimbursement of  professional expenses provided
during the  year.

In the year ended December 31, 2020, Ceres Shipping  Enterprises S.A., an  entity controlled  by  the Livanos family,  received  a
fee of  $1,000 for consultancy services provided in  relation  to  the  Group’s debt re-financings completed  in July and  August 2020.
This amount is classified under Deferred loan issuance costs (i.e.  contra  debt) and  will  be amortized  over the duration  of  the
respective  facilities.

F-59

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

21. Related Party Transactions (Continued)

Compensation of key management personnel

The remuneration of directors and key management was as follows:

Remuneration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Short-term benefits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Expense recognized in respect of  share-based compensation .

7,011
136
1,992

7,536
172
2,044

8,663
181
2,951

Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

9,139

9,752

11,795

For the year ended
December 31,

2018

2019

2020

22. Share-Based Compensation

Omnibus Incentive Compensation Plan

GasLog has granted to executives, managers and certain employees  of the Group, Restricted Stock

Units (‘‘RSUs’’), Stock Appreciation  Rights  or Stock Options  (collectively, the ‘‘SARs’’) and
Performance Stock Units (‘‘PSUs’’) in accordance with its 2013 Omnibus Incentive Compensation Plan
(the ‘‘Plan’’). The RSUs (with the exception  of the RSUs granted  in 2020 that are discussed below) and
PSUs vest three years after the grant  dates while the SARs and the RSUs granted  in 2020 vest
incrementally with one-third of the SARs and  RSUs vesting  on each of the three anniversaries of  the
grant dates. The compensation cost for the  SARs  is recognized on an accelerated  basis as  though each
separate vesting portion of the SARs is  a separate award. Prior to the exercise date the holders of the
awards have no voting rights.

Vesting of the PSUs is also subject to  the achievement of certain performance  targets in relation to

the total shareholder return (‘‘TSR’’) achieved  by  the Company during the  performance period
weighted at 50%, the operating expenses  reduction  (‘‘Opex  reduction’’) weighted at 25% and the
general and administrative expense reduction (‘‘G&A reduction’’) weighted  at 25%.  Specifically, TSR is
benchmarked against the TSR of a selected group of peer companies.  TSR above  the 75th percentile  of
the peer group results in 100% of the  award vesting;  TSR between  the 25th and 75th percentile of the
peer group results in the achieved percentile of award vesting and TSR below the 25th percentile of the
peer group results in none of the award vesting. In addition, achieving more than 100%, 95%-100%,
90%-94% and 85%-89% of the three-year  target Opex reduction results in 100% plus 1 point for  each
point in excess of target, 100%, 75%  and  50% of award vesting, respectively while achieving less than
85% of target cost reduction results in  none  of the award vesting. Finally, achieving  more than 100%,
95%-100%, 90%-94% and 85%-89% of  the target G&A  reduction results in 100%  plus 1 point for  each
point in excess of target, 100%, 75%  and  50% of award vesting, respectively while achieving less than
85% of target cost reduction, results  in none  of  the award vesting. The compensation cost for  the PSUs
is recognized on an accelerated basis  as  though each separately  vesting portion of PSUs  is a separate
award. The holders are entitled to cash distributions that will be accrued  and settled on  vesting.

On April 1, 2020, GasLog granted to  executives, managers and  certain employees of the Group
496,742 RSUs and 496,742 PSUs in accordance with the Plan. The RSUs will vest incrementally with

F-60

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

22. Share-Based Compensation (Continued)

one third of the RSUs vesting on each of April 1, 2021, 2022 and 2023  and  the PSUs  will vest on
April 1, 2023. Additionally, on August  3, 2020, GasLog granted 21,367 RSUs which  will vest
incrementally with one third of the RSUs  vesting on  each of August 3, 2021,  2022 and 2023 and on
August 7, 2020 granted 4,702 RSUs and  4,702 PSUs, which will  vest incrementally with  one third  of the
RSUs vesting on each of August 7, 2021, 2022 and 2023 and the PSUs  will  vest on August  7, 2023.

The details of the outstanding awards  as of December 31, 2020 are presented in the  following

table:

Awards

Number

Grant date

Expiry date

Exercise price*

SARs . . .
SARs . . .
SARs . . .
SARs . . .
SARs . . .
RSUs . . .
SARs . . .
RSUs . . .
SARs . . .
RSUs . . .
SARs . . .
RSUs . . .
PSUs . . . .
RSUs . . .
RSUs . . .
PSUs . . . .

203,114
259,417
274,991
712,673
366,879
85,113
363,540
49,886
244,732

May 17, 2013
April 29, 2023
April 1, 2014 March 31, 2024
April 1, 2015 March 31, 2025
April 1, 2016 March 31, 2026
April 3, 2017
April 2, 2018
April 2, 2018
April 1, 2019
April 1, 2019
7,410 August 20, 2019
27,132 August 20, 2019 August 20, 2029

April 3, 2027
n/a
April 2, 2028
n/a
April 1, 2029
n/a

496,742
496,742
21,367
4,702
4,702

April 1, 2020
April 1, 2020
August 3, 2020
August 7, 2020
August 7, 2020

n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a

$12.48
$23.22
$18.70
$8.50
$14.77
n/a
$15.52
n/a
$17.41
n/a
$11.96
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a
n/a

Fair value at
grant date

$2.3753
$6.0035
$5.6352
$2.3263
$5.0021
$ 16.30
$5.3000
$ 17.79
$5.8612
$ 12.34
3.37
$
3.51
$
3.51
$
3.03
$
3.19
$
3.19
$

*

The exercise prices were decreased by $0.40  and/or $0.38 to reflect the effect from the distribution of the special
dividends declared on November 28, 2018 and December 14, 2019, respectively.

In accordance with the terms of the Plan,  there are  only  service  condition  requirements. The
awards will be settled in cash or in shares at  the sole discretion of the compensation  committee of the
board of directors. These awards have  been treated  as equity settled because the Group has no present
obligation to settle in cash. The amount to be settled for each SAR  exercised is computed in each case,
as the excess, if any, of the fair market value (the closing price of shares) on the  exercise date over  the
exercise price of the SAR.

Fair  value

The fair value of the SARs has been  calculated  based on the Modified  Black-Scholes-Merton

method. Expected volatility was based on  historical  share price volatility for the  period since  the
Group’s initial public offering. The expected dividend is based  on  management’s expectations  of  future

F-61

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

22. Share-Based Compensation (Continued)

payments on the grant date. The significant assumptions used  to  estimate the  fair value of the SARs
are set out below:

Inputs into the model

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

2019

2019

Grant date  share closing price . . .
Exercise price* . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Expected volatility . . . . . . . . . . .
Expected term . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Risk-free interest rate for  the

period similar to the expected
term . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

$ 13.26
$ 12.48

$ 24.00
$ 23.22

$ 19.48
$ 18.70

$ 9.28
$ 8.50

$ 15.55
$ 14.77

$ 16.30
$ 15.52

$ 17.79
$ 17.41

$ 12.34
$ 11.96

29.31% 29.42%

39.3%

47.3%

46.0%

44.5% 45.03%

45.8%

6 years

6 years

6 years

6 years

6 years

6 years

6 years

6 years

1.08%

2.03%

1.48%

1.37%

1.99%

2.61%

2.35%

1.47%

*

The  exercise prices were decreased by $0.40 and/or $0.38 to reflect the effect from the distribution of the special dividends
declared on November 28, 2018 and December 14,  2019, respectively.

The fair value of the RSUs and PSUs  was determined by using the  grant date  closing  price and

was not further adjusted since the holders  are  entitled to dividends.

F-62

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

22. Share-Based Compensation (Continued)

Movement in RSUs, SARs and PSUs

The summary of RSUs, SARs and PSUs is  presented  below:

Weighted
average
exercise price
per share

Weighted average
share price at
the date of
exercise

Weighted
average
contractual
life

Aggregate
fair value

RSUs
Outstanding as of January 1, 2019 . . .
Granted during the year . . . . . . . . . . .
Vested during the  year . . . . . . . . . . . .
Forfeited during the year . . . . . . . . . .

Number of
awards

488,173
106,023
(207,819)
(19,215)

Outstanding as of December 31, 2019 .

367,162

Granted during the year . . . . . . . . . . .
Vested during the  year . . . . . . . . . . . .
Forfeited during the year . . . . . . . . . .

522,811
(245,061)
(1,059)

Outstanding as of December 31, 2020 .

643,853

SARs
Outstanding as of January 1, 2019 . . .
Granted during the year . . . . . . . . . . .
Exercised during the year . . . . . . . . . .
Forfeited during the year . . . . . . . . . .
Expired during the year . . . . . . . . . . .

2,372,163
326,454
(15,774)
(36,198)
(16,472)

Outstanding as of December 31, 2019 .

2,630,173

Forfeited during the year . . . . . . . . . .
Expired during the year . . . . . . . . . . .

(1,085)
(176,610)

—
—
—
—

—

—
—
—

—

14.51
—
8.88
—
—

14.46

—
—

Outstanding as of December 31, 2020 .

2,452,478

14.44

PSUs
Outstanding as of January 1, 2020 . . .
Granted during the year . . . . . . . . . . .

Outstanding as of December 31, 2020 .

—
501,444

501,444

—
—

—

—
—
—
—

—

—
—
—

—

—
—
11.25
—
—

—

—
—

—

—
—

—

1.13
—
—
—

1.16

—
—
—

1.90

7.17
—
—
—
—

6.53

—
—

5.47

—
—

2.25

6,408
1,845
(1,943)
(322)

5,988

1,824
(3,671)
(17)

4,124

9,839
1,845
(37)
(202)
(78)

11,367

(6)
(838)

10,523

—
1,759

1,759

As of December 31, 2020, 2,185,148  SARs have  vested but not been exercised.

GasLog Partners has granted to its executives RCUs  and  PCUs in accordance  with the GasLog
Partners’  Plan. The RCUs and PCUs  will vest  three years after the  grant dates subject to the recipients’
continued service; vesting of the PCUs  is also subject  to  the achievement of certain  performance targets
in relation to total unitholder return.  Specifically, the performance measure is based on the total
unitholder return (‘‘TUR’’) achieved by the Partnership  during  the performance  period, benchmarked
against the TUR of a selected group of peer companies.  TUR  above the 75th  percentile of the  peer
group results in 100% of the award vesting;  TUR between  the 50th and  75th  percentile of the  peer

F-63

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

22. Share-Based Compensation (Continued)

group results in 50% of award vesting;  TUR below  the 50th  percentile of the  peer group results in
none of the award vesting. The holders  are entitled  to  cash  distributions that are accrued  and will be
settled on vesting.

On April 1, 2020, GasLog Partners granted to its executives 233,688 RCUs  and 233,688 PCUs in

accordance with the GasLog Partners’ Plan. The RCUs and PCUs  will vest on April  1, 2023. The
holders  are entitled to cash distributions  that will be accrued  and settled on vesting.

The details of the outstanding awards  as of December 31, 2020 are presented in the  following

table:

Awards

RCUs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
PCUs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
RCUs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
PCUs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
RCUs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
PCUs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
RCUs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
PCUs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Number

Grant date

26,097 April 3, 2017
26,097 April 3, 2017
24,608 April 2, 2018
24,608 April 2, 2018
26,308 April 1, 2019
26,308 April 1, 2019
233,688 April 1, 2020
233,688 April 1, 2020

Fair value at
grant date

$23.85
$23.85
$23.40
$23.40
$22.99
$22.99
$ 2.02
$ 2.02

In accordance with the terms of the GasLog Partners’ Plan, the awards  will be settled in cash or in

common units at the sole discretion of the  board of  directors or such committee as  may be designated
by the board to administer the GasLog Partners’ Plan. These awards  have been treated as equity
settled because the Partnership has no  present obligation to settle them in  cash.

Fair  value

The fair value of the RCUs and PCUs  in  accordance with the GasLog  Partners’ Plan was
determined by using the grant date closing price  and  was  not  further adjusted since  the holders are
entitled to cash distributions.

F-64

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

22. Share-Based Compensation (Continued)

Movement in RCUs and PCUs

The summary of RCUs and PCUs is  presented  below:

Number of
awards

Weighted
average
contractual life

Aggregate
fair value

RCUs
Outstanding as of January 1, 2019 . . . . . . . . . .
Granted during the year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Vested during the year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

75,084
26,308
(24,925)

Outstanding as of December 31, 2019 . . . . . . . .

76,467

Granted during the year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Vested during the year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

233,688
(220,177)

Outstanding as of December 31, 2020 . . . . . . . .

89,978

PCUs
Outstanding as of January 1, 2019 . . . . . . . . . .
Granted during the year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Vested during the year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

75,084
26,308
(24,925)

Outstanding as of December 31, 2019 . . . . . . . .

76,467

Granted during the year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Vested during the year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Forfeited during the year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

233,688
(213,955)
(6,222)

1.25
—
—

1.26

—
—

2.04

1.25
—
—

1.26

—
—
—

Outstanding as of December 31, 2020 . . . . . . . .

89,978

2.04

1,595
605
(410)

1,790

472
(1,816)

446

1,595
605
(410)

1,790

472
(1,668)
(148)

446

The total expense recognized in respect of share-based  compensation for  the year ended

December 31, 2020 was $5,486 (December 31, 2019: $5,107 and  December 31, 2018: $5,216). The total
accrued cash distribution as of December  31, 2020 is  $552 (December  31, 2019:  $1,176).

23. Commitments

(a) Commitments relating to the vessels under construction  (Note  6) on  December 31,  2020

payable to Samsung were as follows:

Not later than one year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

As of
December 31,
2020

466,930

466,930

(b) Future gross minimum lease payments  in relation to non-cancellable time charter  agreements

for vessels in operation, including a vessel under a  lease (Note 7)  as of December  31, 2020 are as
follows (30 off-hire days are assumed when each  vessel  will undergo scheduled  dry-docking;  in addition,

F-65

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

23. Commitments (Continued)

early delivery of the vessels by the charterers  or any exercise of the charterers’  options to extend the
terms of the charters are not accounted for):

Not later than one year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Later than one year and not later than two years . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Later than two years and not later than three years . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Later than three years and not later  than  four years . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Later than four years and not later than  five  years . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Later than five years . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

As of
December 31,
2020

426,830
381,318
351,718
294,366
281,319
600,771

Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

2,336,322

Future gross minimum lease payments disclosed in the above table exclude the lease  payments of

the vessels that are under construction as of  December 31,  2020 (Note  6). For these vessels, the
following charter party agreements have  been signed:

(cid:127) In August 2018, GAS-thirty three Ltd., signed an agreement with a wholly owned subsidiary of

Cheniere Energy Inc. (‘‘Cheniere’’), for the  GasLog Galveston to be chartered to Cheniere upon
delivery in 2021 for an initial term of seven years.

(cid:127) In  December 2018, GAS-thirty four Ltd., signed  an agreement with Cheniere, for its  newbuilding
Hull No. 2311 to be chartered to Cheniere  upon delivery in 2021  for an initial term  of seven
years.

(cid:127) In  December 2018, GAS-thirty five  Ltd., signed an  agreement with  Cheniere,  for its newbuilding
Hull No. 2312 to be chartered to Cheniere  upon delivery in 2021  for an initial term  of seven
years.

(c)

In September 2017 (and in addition  to  the seven existing maintenance agreements signed  in

2015 in relation to GasLog vessels), GasLog LNG  Services Ltd. entered  into  further maintenance
agreements with Wartsila Greece S.A.  (‘‘Wartsila’’)  in respect of eight  additional GasLog  LNG carriers.
In July 2018,  GasLog LNG Services Ltd. renewed  the maintenance agreements signed in 2015 with
Wartsila. The agreements ensure dynamic  maintenance  planning, technical support, security of spare
parts supply, specialist technical personnel and performance monitoring.

(d) In March 2019, GasLog LNG Services entered into an  agreement with  Samsung  in respect of

nineteen of GasLog’s vessels. The agreement covers  the supply of ballast water  management systems on
board the vessels by Samsung and associated  field, commissioning  and engineering services for a firm
period of six years. As of December  31, 2020,  ballast water management systems had  been installed  on
twelve out of the nineteen vessels.

F-66

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

23. Commitments (Continued)

(e) Other Guarantees:

As of December 31, 2020, GasLog LNG Services Ltd. has provided bank guarantees as  follows:

(cid:127) Up to $250 to third parties relating  to  the satisfactory  performance of its ship management

activities;

(cid:127) Bank guarantee of $10 to the Greek Ministry of Finance  relating to the  satisfactory performance

of the obligations arising under Greek laws 89/1967, 378/1968 as  amended  by  law 814/1978.

(cid:127) Bank guarantee for $300 relating to the  participation in a FSRU  tender.

24. Financial Risk Management

The Group’s activities expose it to a variety of financial  risks,  including market risk, liquidity risk

and credit risk. The Group’s overall risk  management program  focuses  on the  unpredictability of
financial markets and seeks to minimize  potential adverse effects on the  Group’s financial performance.
The Group makes use of derivative financial instruments  such as  interest rate swaps to moderate
certain risk exposures.

Market risk

Interest rate risk: The Group is subject to market risks  relating to changes in  interest rates
because it has floating rate debt outstanding. Significant increases in interest  rates  could  adversely
affect the Group’s  results of operations  and  its ability to service its debt. The Group  uses interest rate
swaps to reduce its exposure to market risk from changes  in interest rates. The principal objective of
these contracts is to minimize risks associated with its floating rate debt and not for  speculative or
trading purposes. As of December 31, 2020, the Group has economically hedged 47.64% of its variable
rate interest exposure relating to its existing loan  facilities and  the  bonds by swapping the variable rate
to a fixed rate (December 31, 2019: 44.22%).

The aggregate principal amount of our outstanding floating rate debt  as of December 31,  2020 was

$1,843,110. As an indication of the extent  of  our  sensitivity to interest rate changes,  an increase in
LIBOR of 10 basis points would increase  the annual interest expense on the  un-hedged portion  of the
Group’s loans by approximately $1,665 (December 31,  2019: $1,530  and December 31, 2018:  $1,395).

Interest rate sensitivity analysis: The fair value of the interest rate swaps as of December 31, 2020

was estimated as a net liability of $113,855 (December 31, 2019: net liability of  $49,873).

The interest rate swap agreements described below are  subject  to  market risk  as they are recorded

at fair value in the statement of financial position at year end.  The  fair value of interest rate  swap
liabilities increases when interest rates  decrease and decreases when interest rates increase. As of
December 31, 2020, if interest rates had  increased  or decreased by 10 basis points with all other
variables held constant, the positive/(negative) impact,  respectively, on the fair  value of the  interest  rate
swaps would have amounted to $5,162 (December 31, 2019: $6,285 and December 31, 2018: $7,351)
affecting loss/(gain) on derivatives in the respective periods.

F-67

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

24. Financial Risk Management (Continued)

Other  price risk: The decrease in the fair value of Egypt LNG  Shipping Ltd., in response  to

unfavorable market conditions resulting  in a decrease in  charter rates and vessel values, could
negatively impact the value of the Group’s investment in associate. Therefore, management might
conclude that impairment is necessary in  the future.

Currency risk: Currency risk is the risk that the value of  financial  instruments  and/or the cost  of

commercial transactions will fluctuate  due  to changes  in foreign exchange rates.  Currency risk arises
when future commercial transactions  and  recognized assets and  liabilities are denominated in a
currency that is not the Group’s subsidiaries’  functional currency. The Group is exposed  to  foreign
exchange risk arising from various currency exposures  primarily with respect to general  and crew costs
denominated in Euros (‘‘EUR’’). Specifically, for the year ended December 31, 2020, $130,861 of the
operating and administrative expenses  were denominated in EUR (December 31, 2019: $113,804 and
December 31, 2018: $116,252). As of December 31, 2020, $34,199 of the Group’s outstanding trade
payables and accruals were denominated in EUR (December 31, 2019: $27,766). The Group is also
exposed  in currency risk in relation to our NOK 2024  Bonds (Note 13).

The Group has entered into CCSs (Note 26) to hedge its currency exposure from the NOK  2024
Bonds and forward foreign exchange contracts to hedge  its currency exposure from payments in EUR
and Japanese Yen (‘‘JPY’’). In addition,  management monitors exchange rate fluctuations on a
continuous basis. As an indication of  the  extent of  the Group’s sensitivity to changes in exchange rate,
a 10% increase in the average EUR/USD  exchange  rate would have decreased the Group’s profit and
cash flows during the year ended December  31, 2020 by $13,086, based upon its expenses  during the
year (December 31, 2019: $11,380 and  December 31, 2018: $11,625).

Interest rate risk on NOK 2024 Bonds (cash flow hedge): The Group uses approved instruments

such as CCSs, in order to reduce the  variability of  the cash flows associated with the functional
currency equivalent interest and principal  of  the NOK 2024  Bonds  as well as changes in the  cash flows
associated with changes in the currency rates and is therefore exposed to the following interest rate
benchmarks within its hedge accounting  relationship, which  are subject  to  interest rate benchmark
reform: USD LIBOR and NIBOR (collectively  ‘‘IBORs’’).

The Group has closely monitored the  market  and the  output from  the various industry working
groups managing the transition to new benchmark  interest rates.  This includes announcements  made by
LIBOR regulators (including the Financial Conduct Authority  (‘‘FCA’’) and  the US  Commodity Futures
Trading Commission) regarding the transition away  from IBORs  to  the  Secured  Overnight Financing
Rate (‘‘SOFR’’) and the Norwegian Overnight  Weighted Average (‘‘NOWA’’) respectively. The FCA
has made clear that, at the end of 2021, it  will no longer seek to persuade or compel banks to submit
LIBOR estimates.

The Group believes that all areas potentially impacted (including borrowings, derivative financial

instruments etc.) have been identified.

The Group’s NOK 2024 Bonds agreement includes fall back provisions for  a case of cessation of

the referenced benchmark interest rate. Specifically, it states  that in the case  that  the interest  rate
referenced IBOR is no longer available,  the interest rate will be set by the bond trustee in consultation
with the issuer to: (i) any relevant replacement reference rate generally accepted in the  market; or

F-68

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

24. Financial Risk Management (Continued)

(ii) such  interest rate that best reflects the  interest  rate for deposits in the bond  currency  offered for
the relevant interest period. In each case, if  any such rate  is below zero, the reference rate will be
deemed to be zero.

For the Group’s CCSs, the International Swaps and Derivatives Association’s (‘‘ISDA’’) fall back
clauses were made available at the end  of 2019.  These  clauses or similar language has  been inserted
into a number of ISDA agreements across the  Group and all outstanding agreements will  be  considered
on a case by case basis with each counterparty.

Below are details of the hedging instruments  and  hedged item in scope of the IFRS 9 amendments

due to interest rate benchmark reform, by  hedge  type. The terms of  the hedged item match  those of
the corresponding hedging instruments.

Hedge type

Instrument type

Counterparty Maturing in

Notional
amount

Hedged item

Cash flow hedges . Receive 3-month

DNB

Nov 2024 $32,850 NOK  2024 Bonds of

the same maturity  and
notional  of  the CCSs.

NIBOR, pay 3-month
USD LIBOR floating
CCS
Receive 3-month
NIBOR, pay 3-month
USD LIBOR floating
CCS
Receive 3-month
NIBOR, pay 3-month
USD LIBOR floating
CCS

SEB

Nov  2024 $32,850

Nordea

Nov 2024 $32,850

Total $98,550

The Group will continue to apply the amendments  to  IFRS 9  until  the uncertainty  arising  from the
interest rate benchmark reforms with  respect to the timing  and  the  amount  of the underlying cash flows
that the Group is exposed ends. The  Group  has assumed  that this uncertainty will not end  until the
Group’s contracts that reference IBORs  are amended to specify  the date  on which  the interest rate
benchmark will be replaced, the cash  flows of the alternative benchmark rate and relevant spread
adjustment.

Liquidity risk

Liquidity risk is the risk that arises when  the maturity of assets and liabilities  does not match. An

unmatched position potentially enhances profitability, but can  also increase  the risk  of  losses. The
Group minimizes liquidity risk by maintaining  sufficient cash and cash  equivalents and by having
available adequate amounts of undrawn credit facilities.

The following tables detail the Group’s expected cash  flows for its non-derivative financial
liabilities. The tables have been drawn  up based on  the undiscounted cash flows  of financial  liabilities

F-69

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

24. Financial Risk Management (Continued)

based on the earliest date on which the Group can  be  required to pay. The  table includes both interest
and principal cash flows. Variable future  interest payments were  determined  based on an average
LIBOR plus the margins applicable to the  Group’s loans  at the  end of each year presented.

Weighted
average
effective
interest rate

Less than
1 month

1 - 3
months

3 - 12
months

1  - 5
years

5+
years

Total

December 31, 2019
Trade and other accounts

payable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Amounts due to related

parties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Other payables and accruals* .
Other non-current liabilities* .
Variable interest loans . . . . . .
Bonds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Lease liabilities . . . . . . . . . . .

Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

December 31, 2020
Trade and other accounts

payable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Amounts due to related

parties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Other payables and accruals* .
Other non-current liabilities* .
Variable interest loans . . . . . .
Bonds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Lease liabilities . . . . . . . . . . .

Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

$ 24,306

3,203

106

—

—

27,615

4.10%

200
31,036
—
45,591
49,233
1,738

—
49,548
—

—
—
—
5,210
551
—
44,867 208,217 2,004,266
496,780
28,060
75,823
14,292

9,369
3,379

—
—
1,174

200
85,794
1,725
807,894 3,110,835
— 583,442
296,122

200,890

$152,104 110,366 255,885 2,577,420 1,009,958 4,105,733

$ 24,651

129

266

—

—

25,046

164
34,919
—
54,892

2.46%

—
28,940
—

—
17,399
—

164
—
81,258
—
1,991
612
39,196 227,325 2,224,725 1,264,577 3,810,715
— 521,439
277,372

—
—
1,379

478,314
75,303

32,485
14,072

182,880

— 10,640
3,361

1,756

$116,382

82,266 291,547 2,778,954 1,448,836 4,717,985

*

Non-financial liabilities are excluded.

The amounts included above for variable interest rate instruments are subject to change if changes

in variable interest rates differ from  those estimates  of  interest  rates determined at the  end of the
reporting period.

The following tables detail the Group’s expected cash  flows for its derivative financial instruments.
The table has been drawn up based on  the undiscounted contractual net cash inflows and outflows on
derivative instruments that are settled  on a net basis. When the amount payable or receivable  is not
fixed, the amount disclosed has been determined by  reference to the  projected interest rates as

F-70

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

24. Financial Risk Management (Continued)

illustrated by the yield curves existing at  the end of the reporting period.  The undiscounted contractual
cash flows are based on the contractual maturities  of the derivatives.

Less than
1 month

1 - 3
months

3 - 12
months

1 -  5
years

5+
years

Total

December 31, 2019
Interest rate swaps . . . . . . . . . . . .
Cross currency swaps . . . . . . . . . .
Forward foreign exchange

contracts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

December 31, 2020
Interest rate swaps . . . . . . . . . . . .
Cross currency swaps . . . . . . . . . .
Forward foreign exchange

contracts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

7
—

(48)
(41)

559
—

(113)
446

Credit risk

52
22

(101)
(27)

1,128
(25)

(234)
869

5,364
(26)

(768)
4,570

33,772
(182)

—
33,590

42,016
(3,590)

—
38,426

73,968
(5,597)

—
68,371

5,049
—

—
5,049

5,132
—

—
5,132

52,488
(3,594)

(917)
47,977

114,559
(5,804)

(347)
108,408

Credit  risk is the risk that a counterparty will fail to discharge its obligations  and cause a financial

loss and arises from cash and cash equivalents, short-term  investments, favorable  derivative financial
instruments and deposits with banks and financial institutions,  as well  as credit exposures  to  customers,
including trade and other receivables,  dividends receivable and other amounts due from  related parties.
The Group is exposed to credit risk in the  event of non-performance by any of its counterparties. To
limit this risk, the Group currently deals primarily with financial institutions  and customers with high
credit ratings.

As of December 31,

2019

2020

Cash and cash equivalents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Short-term investments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Trade and other receivables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Dividends receivable and other amounts  due  from related  parties
Derivative financial instruments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

263,747
4,500
24,900
573
4,001

367,269
—
36,223
1,259
6,095

For the year ended December 31, 2020,  57.2% of the Group’s revenue  was earned from  Shell
(December 31, 2019 and December 31,  2018, 70.0% and 74.2%, respectively) and  accounts receivable
were not collateralized; however, management  believes that the  credit risk is  partially offset by the
creditworthiness of the Group’s counterparties.  The  Group did  not experience significant credit losses
on its accounts receivable portfolio during the three years ended December 31, 2020.  The carrying
amount of financial assets recorded in  the consolidated financial  statements represents  the Group’s
maximum exposure to credit risk. Management monitors exposure  to  credit risk, and  they believe that
there is no substantial credit risk arising  from the Group’s  counterparties.

F-71

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

24. Financial Risk Management (Continued)

The credit risk on liquid funds and derivative financial instruments is limited  because the
counterparties are banks with high credit ratings  assigned by international credit-rating agencies.

25. Capital Risk Management

The Group’s objectives when managing capital are to safeguard the Group’s  ability to continue as
a going concern, to ensure that it maintains a strong credit rating and healthy  capital ratios  in order to
support its business and maximize shareholders value.

The Group monitors capital using a gearing ratio,  which is total debt divided  by  total equity plus

total debt. The gearing ratio is calculated  as follows:

Borrowings, current portion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Borrowings, non-current portion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Lease liabilities, current portion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Lease liabilities, non-current portion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Total debt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Total equity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

As of December 31,

2019

2020

255,422
2,891,973
9,363
195,567

3,352,325
1,649,853

245,626
3,527,595
9,644
186,526

3,969,391
1,597,137

Total debt and equity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

5,002,178

5,566,528

Gearing ratio . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

67.0%

71.3%

26. Derivative Financial Instruments

The fair value of the derivative assets is as  follows:

Derivative assets carried at fair value through profit or loss (FVTPL)
Interest rate swaps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Forward foreign exchange contracts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Derivative assets designated and effective as hedging  instruments

carried at fair value

As of
December 31,

2019

2020

18
389

—
327

Cross currency swaps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

3,594

5,768

Total

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

4,001

6,095

Derivative financial instruments, current  assets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Derivative financial instruments, non-current  assets . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

429
3,572

534
5,561

Total

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

4,001

6,095

F-72

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

26. Derivative Financial Instruments (Continued)

The fair value of the derivative liabilities  is as follows:

As of December 31,

2019

2020

Derivative liabilities carried at fair value  through  profit or  loss

(FVTPL)

Interest rate swaps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Forward foreign exchange contracts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

49,891
41

113,855
—

Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

49,932

113,855

Derivative financial instruments, current  liability . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Derivative financial instruments, non-current  liability . . . . . . . . . .

8,095
41,837

35,415
78,440

Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

49,932

113,855

Interest rate swap agreements

The Group enters into interest rate swap agreements  which convert the  floating interest rate
exposure into a fixed interest rate in order  to  hedge a portion of the Group’s exposure to fluctuations
in prevailing market interest rates. Under  the interest rate swaps,  the bank counterparty effects
quarterly floating-rate payments to the Group for  the notional amount based  on the  LIBOR, and the
Group effects quarterly payments to the  bank on  the notional  amount at  the respective fixed rates.

Interest rate swaps designated as cash flow  hedging instruments

As of December 31, 2019 and 2020, there  are no  interest  rate swaps designated  as cash flow

hedging instruments for accounting purposes.

F-73

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

26. Derivative Financial Instruments (Continued)

Interest rate swaps held for trading

The principal terms of the interest rate  swaps held for  trading were as  follows:

Effective
Date

Termination
Date

Company

GasLog .
GasLog .
GasLog .
GasLog .
GasLog .
GasLog(1)

GasLog(1)
GasLog .
GasLog(2)
GasLog(1)
GasLog(1)
GasLog .
GasLog .
GasLog .
GasLog .
GasLog(7)

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GasLog(5)
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.
GAS-twenty seven Ltd.(5) .
GAS-twenty seven Ltd.(5) .
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GasLog .
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GasLog .
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GasLog .
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GasLog .

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GasLog(3)
GasLog .
GasLog .
GasLog .
GasLog .
GasLog(4)
GasLog(4)
GasLog(6)

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GAS-twenty seven Ltd.(6) .
GAS-twenty seven Ltd.(6) .
GAS-fifteen Ltd.(7)
.

.

.

.

Counterparty

. Deutsche  Bank AG
. Deutsche  Bank AG
. Deutsche  Bank AG
. DNB
. HSBC
. Nordea  Bank  Finland

(‘‘Nordea’’)

. SCB
. SEB
. HSBC
. Nordea
. SCB
. ABN
. Nordea
. Nordea
. SEB
. SEB

. DNB
. DNB
. ING
. DNB
. HSBC
. HSBC
. Citibank  Europe Plc.

(‘‘CITI’’)

. CITI
. SEB
. Nordea
. DNB
. SEB
. Nordea
. ING
. DNB

. DNB
. ING
. NBG

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Trade
Date

July 2016
July 2016
July 2016
July 2016
July 2016

July  2016
July 2020
July  2016
Feb  2017
Feb  2017
July 2020
Feb 2017
May  2018
May  2018
May 2018
May 2018

May 2018
July 2020
July 2020
May 2018
May 2018
May 2018

May 2018
May 2018

July 2016
July 2016
July 2016
July 2016
July 2016

July  2016
July 2016
July 2016
Feb  2017
Feb  2017
Feb 2017
Feb 2017
July 2020
May  2018
July  2020
Apr  2018

July  2020
July 2020
July 2020
July 2018
Apr 2018
Apr 2018

July 2020
July  2021

December 2018 October 2018
December 2018 October  2018
December 2018 January 2019
December 2018
December  2018
May 2020

July 2020
July 2020
July  2020
December 2018 April 2020

July 2020
July 2020

April  2020
July 2020

September 2020 October 2020

Fixed
Interest
Rate

1.98%
1.98%
1.98%
1.719%
1.79%

1.815%
2.015%
1.8405%
2.005%/2.17%
2.0145%
2.2145%
2.003%
3.070%
2.562%
3.025%
2.300%

3.056%
3.146%
3.24%
2.472%
2.475%
2.550%

3.082%
3.095%
2.745%
2.793%
2.685%
2.958%
2.937%
3.127%
2.979%

2.979%/3.069%
3.176%
1.795%

Notional Amount

December  31, December 31,

2019

2020

66,667
66,667
66,667
73,333
33,333

66,667
N/A
50,000
100,000
100,000
N/A
100,000
N/A
66,667
N/A
50,000

N/A
N/A
N/A
73,333
33,333
33,333

N/A
N/A
50,000
66,667
73,333
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A

N/A
N/A
N/A

N/A
66,667
66,667
73,333
33,333

N/A
66,667
50,000
100,000
N/A
100,000
100,000
66,667
66,667
50,000
N/A

N/A
48,889
24,444
73,333
33,333
33,333

30,000
N/A
50,000
66,667
73,333
50,000
N/A
100,000
N/A

40,000
20,000
94,923

July  2020
July  2021
July  2022
July 2022
July  2022

July  2020
July 2022
July  2021
Feb 2022
July  2020
Mar 2022
Mar  2022
July  2026
July  2026
July 2024
September
2020
July 2020
July 2024
July 2024
July 2025
July  2024
July  2025

July 2024
July  2025
July 2026
July 2028
July 2025
July 2024
May 2020
July 2024
April
2020/July
2020
April 2025
April 2025
July 2025

Total

1,170,000

1,578,256

(1)

(2)

(3)

(4)

(5)

In July 2020,  the Group novated to  SCB two  interest rate swaps with  Nordea  originally maturing in  March and  July  2022 with notional
amounts of $100,000 and $66,667, respectively. Upon  transfer, SCB amended the  fixed interest rate  for their additional credit  charges of
20bps.

The fixed interest rate was agreed at  2.005% until  May  2020 and was increased at  2.17% from May 2020 to February  2022.

In May 2018, the Group  entered into  a  new  interest  rate swap  agreement with  a notional amount of $30,000  maturing  in July 2025.

In May 2020, the Group  terminated  an  interest  rate  swap  with  Nordea  originally maturing in  July 2024  and replaced it with  a new swap with
ING of the same notional amount of  $100,000  and  the  same maturity  date of July  2024 with  an effective date  of July  2020. The impact of
these parallel transactions for the Group  was a  loss  of  $41.

In July 2020,  the Group terminated an  interest  rate  swap with  DNB originally  maturing in  July  2024 and  replaced  it with two  new interest
rate swap agreements  entered by GAS-twenty  seven Ltd. with DNB  and  ING of the  same total notional amount of $73,333  and  the  same
maturity  date  of  July  2024 with  an effective  date of  July 2020  and  with no  cash impact on  the Group.

F-74

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

26. Derivative Financial Instruments (Continued)

(6)

(7)

In July 2020,  the Group terminated an  interest  rate  swap with  DNB originally  maturing in  April 2025  and replaced  it with  two new interest
rate swap agreements  entered by GAS-twenty  seven Ltd. with DNB  and  ING of the  same total notional amount of $60,000  and  the  same
maturity  date  of  April 2025  with an effective date  of  April  and  July 2020 and with  no cash impact on  the Group.

In September 2020, the Group terminated an  interest  rate  swap  with SEB  originally  maturing in  July 2025  and replaced it with  a  new interest
rate swap agreement entered by GAS-fifteen  Ltd. with  NBG  of  initial  notional  amount of $96,815 and the  same  maturity date  of July 2025
with an effective date  of October  2020 and  with  no cash impact  on  the Group.

The derivative instruments listed above were  not  designated as  cash flow hedging  instruments. The

change in the fair value of these contracts  for  the year ended December 31,  2020 amounted to a net
loss of $63,982 (December 31, 2019: $55,865 net loss,  December 31,  2018:  $4,333 net loss),  which was
recognized against profit or loss in the  period incurred and is included in Loss  on derivatives. During
the year ended December 31, 2020, the net loss of $63,982  derived  from changes in the LIBOR curve
as well as modifications of the Group’s interest swap portfolio that includes interest rate  swap
agreements with maturities out to 2028.

Cross currency swap agreements

The Group entered into CCSs which  converted the  floating interest rate  exposure and the

variability of the USD functional currency  equivalent  cash flows into a fixed  interest  rate and principal
on maturity with respect to the NOK  2021 Bonds and  maintains CCSs  which convert the  floating
interest rate exposure and the variability  of the  USD  functional currency equivalent cash  flows  into  a
floating interest rate and principal on maturity  with respect to NOK 2024  Bonds,  in order to hedge the
Group’s exposure  to fluctuations deriving from NOK.

The CCSs are designated as cash flow hedging instruments for accounting purposes.

The principal terms of the CCSs designated as cash  flow hedging instruments were as  follows:

Company

Counterparty

Trade
Date

Effective
Date

Termination
Date

GasLog(1) . . . . . . . . . . DNB
GasLog(1) . . . . . . . . . . SEB
GasLog(1) . . . . . . . . . . Nordea

Nov 2019 Nov 2019 Nov 2024 floating
Nov 2019 Nov 2019 Nov 2024 floating
Nov 2019 Nov 2019 Nov  2024 floating

Total

32,850
32,850
32,850

98,550

2020

32,850
32,850
32,850

98,550

Notional Amount

Interest December 31, December 31,

Rate

2019

(1)

On November 27, 2019, in conjunction with the issuance of the NOK 2024 Bonds, the Group entered into these CCSs to
exchange interest payments and principal on maturity on the same terms as the NOK 2024 Bonds.

For the year ended December 31, 2020,  the effective portion  of  changes in  the fair value of CCSs
amounting to a gain of $1,873 has been recognized  in Other comprehensive loss  (December 31, 2019:
$3,215 loss, December 31, 2018: $5,543 loss). For  the year  ended December 31, 2020,  a loss  of  $625
was recycled to profit or loss representing the  realized  loss on CCSs  in relation to the interest expenses
component of the hedge (December  31, 2019:  $607 loss,  December 31,  2018:  $454 loss). Additionally,
for the year ended December 31, 2020,  a loss of $3,248 was recognized in Other comprehensive loss in
relation to the retranslation of the NOK Bonds in  U.S. dollars  as of December 31,  2020 (December 31,
2019: $325 loss, December 31, 2018: $4,831  gain).

F-75

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

26. Derivative Financial Instruments (Continued)

Forward foreign exchange contracts

The Group uses forward foreign exchange contracts  to  mitigate foreign exchange transaction
exposures in EUR and JPY. Under these forward foreign exchange contracts, the bank counterparty
will effect fixed payments in EUR or  JPY to the Group  and the  Group will effect fixed payments in
USD  to the bank counterparty on the  respective settlement dates. All forward foreign  exchange
contracts are considered by management  to be part of economic hedge arrangements but have  not  been
formally designated as such.

The principal terms of the forward foreign exchange contracts held for  trading  are as follows:

Company

Counterparty

Trade  Date

Number  of
contracts

Settlement
Dates

Fixed
Exchange Rate
(EUR/USD)

Total
Exchange
Amount
(in thousands)

GasLog .
GasLog .

.
.

.
.

.
.

.
.

.
.

.
.

.
.

.
.

.
.

.
November 2020
. Citibank  Europe PLC  UK November  2020

ABN

3
3

January  - March 2021 1.1978582 - 1.1995155
January  -  March  2021

1.1975  -  1.1991

Total

A 6,000
A 7,500
E13,500

Company

Counterparty

Trade  Date

Number  of
contracts

Settlement
Dates

Fixed
Exchange Rate
(JPY/USD)

Total  Exchange
Amount
(in thousands)

GasLog .

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

. Citibank  Europe PLC UK November  2020

1

January 2021

0.0096019938

JP¥29,397

Total

JP¥29,397

The derivative instruments listed above were  not  designated as  cash flow hedging  instruments as  of

December 31, 2020. The change in the  fair  value of these contracts for  the  year  ended December  31,
2020 amounted to a net loss of $21 (for  the year  ended December  31, 2019: $1,815 net  gain,
December 31, 2018: $3,589 net loss),  which was recognized against  profit  or loss  in the year incurred
and is included in Loss on derivatives.

An analysis of Loss on derivatives is as follows:

Unrealized loss on derivative financial instruments held for trading . . . . . .
Realized gain/(loss) on interest rate swaps held for trading . . . . . . . . . . . .
Realized gain/(loss) on forward foreign  exchange  contracts  held for trading
Recycled loss of cash flow hedges reclassified  to  profit or  loss . . . . . . . . . .
Ineffective portion of cash flow hedges . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

(7,922)
1,893
241
—
(289)

(54,050)
3,164
(3,707)
(697)
(151)

(64,044)
(20,855)
564
—
(323)

Total

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

(6,077)

(55,441)

(84,658)

For the year ended
December 31,

2018

2019

2020

F-76

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

26. Derivative Financial Instruments (Continued)

Fair  value measurements

The fair value of the Group’s financial assets and liabilities approximate to their carrying amounts

at the reporting date.

The fair value of the interest rate swaps at  the end of  reporting period was determined by

discounting the future cash flows using  the interest rate yield curves at  the end of reporting  period and
the credit risk inherent in the contract.  The  fair value of the  CCSs at the end of the reporting period
was determined by discounting the future  cash  flows  that are estimated based  on forward  exchange
rates and contract forward rates, discounted at a rate that reflects  the credit  risk of the  counterparties.
The Group uses its judgment to make  assumptions that are primarily based on market  conditions for
the estimation of the counterparty risk  and  the Group’s own risk that are considered for  the calculation
of the fair value of the interest rate and  CCSs. The  interest rate swaps, the forward foreign exchange
contracts and the CCSs meet Level 2  classification, according to the  fair value hierarchy as defined by
IFRS 13 Fair Value Measurement. There were no financial instruments in Levels 1  or 3 and no transfers
between Levels 1,  2 or 3 during the periods presented. The definitions of the levels provided by
IFRS 13 are based on the degree to which the fair  value is observable:

(cid:127) Level 1 fair value measurements are  those derived from quoted  prices  in active markets for

identical assets or liabilities;

(cid:127) Level 2 fair value measurements are  those derived from inputs other than quoted  prices

included within Level 1 that are observable for the asset  or liability, either directly (i.e., as
prices) or indirectly (i.e., derived from  prices); and

(cid:127) Level 3 fair value measurements are  those derived from valuation techniques that include inputs
for the asset or liability that are not based  on observable market data (unobservable inputs).

F-77

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

27. Cash Flow Reconciliations

The reconciliation of the Group’s financing activities for  the three years ended December  31, 2020

are presented in the tables below:

A reconciliation of borrowings arising from financing activities is as follows:

Opening
balance

Cash
flows

Other
comprehensive
income

Non-cash
items

Deferred
financing
costs, assets

Total

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—
—

—

—

Borrowings outstanding as of

January 1, 2018 . . . . . . . . . .

2,547,556

—

Proceeds from bank loans and

bonds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

— 524,165

Bank loans and bond

repayments . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Additions in deferred loan/bond
fees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Amortization of deferred loan
and bond issuance costs and
premium (Note 19) . . . . . . . .
Retranslation of the NOK 2021
Bonds in USD . . . . . . . . . . .

Borrowings outstanding as of

— (231,753)

—

(7,449)

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

— 2,547,556

—

—

524,165

(231,753)

1,119

(12,941)

(19,271)

12,593

(4,831)

—

—

—

12,593

(4,831)

December 31, 2018 . . . . . . . .

2,547,556

284,963

(4,831)

13,712

(12,941)

2,828,459

Opening
balance

Cash flows

Other
comprehensive
income

Non-cash
items

Deferred
financing
costs,  assets

Total

Borrowings outstanding as of

January 1, 2019 . . . . . . . . . .

2,828,459

—

Proceeds from bank loans and

bonds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Bank loans and bond

repayments . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Payment for bond repurchase . .
Additions in deferred loan/

bond fees . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Amortization of deferred loan
and bond issuance costs and
premium (Note 19) . . . . . . .
Retranslation of the NOK 2021
Bonds and the NOK 2024
Bonds in USD . . . . . . . . . . .

Borrowings outstanding as of

— 905,730

— (547,751)
— (34,602)

— (25,912)

—

—

—

—

—

—

—
—

—

—

—
—

2,828,459

905,730

(547,751)
(34,602)

(910)

7,016

(19,806)

14,154

1,211

—

—

—

14,154

1,211

December 31, 2019 . . . . . . . .

2,828,459

297,465

1,211

13,244

7,016

3,147,395

F-78

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

27. Cash Flow Reconciliations (Continued)

Opening
balance

Cash flows

Other
comprehensive
income

Non-cash
items

Deferred
financing
costs, assets

Total

Borrowings outstanding as of
January 1, 2020 . . . . . . . .

Proceeds from bank loans

3,147,395

—

and bonds . . . . . . . . . . . .

— 2,138,035

Bank loans and bond

repayments . . . . . . . . . . . .
Payment  for bond repurchase
at premium . . . . . . . . . . .

Additions in deferred loan

fees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Deferred loan fees received .
Amortization and write-off of

deferred loan/bond
issuance costs/premium
(Note 19) . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Retranslation of the NOK

2024 Bonds in USD . . . . .

Borrowings outstanding as of
December 31, 2020 . . . . . .

— (1,481,709)

(1,937)

(35,795)
792

—

—
—

—

—

—

—

—

—

—
—

—

—

(8,063)

—

997
—

—

—

—

—

(6,442)
—

3,147,395

2,138,035

(1,489,772)

(1,937)

(41,240)
792

—

—

—

22,876

3,248

(6,176)

—

—

22,876

(2,928)

3,147,395

619,386

3,248

9,634

(6,442)

3,773,221

A reconciliation of derivatives arising from  financing  activities is as follows:

Cash flows

Other
comprehensive
income

Non-cash
items

Total

— 16,396

(7,922)
(289)

(7,922)
(289)

—

—
—

(5,089)

(5,089)

— (5,089)

(8,211)

3,096

—

—
—

—

—

Net derivative assets as of January 1, 2018 . . . . .
Unrealized loss on derivative financial

instruments held for trading . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Ineffective portion of cash flow hedges . . . . . . . .
Effective portion of changes in the fair  value of
derivatives designated as cash flow hedging
instruments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Opening
balance

16,396

—
—

—

Net derivative assets as of December  31, 2018 . .

16,396

F-79

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

27. Cash Flow Reconciliations (Continued)

Net derivative assets as of January 1, 2019 . . . .
Unrealized loss on derivative financial

instruments held for trading . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Ineffective portion of cash flow hedges . . . . . . .
Payment  for CCS termination . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Effective portion of changes in the fair  value of
derivatives designated as cash flow hedging
instruments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Net derivative assets/(liabilities) as of

Opening
balance

3,096

—
—
—

—

Cash flows

Other
comprehensive
income

Non-cash
items

Total

—

—
—
3,731

—

—
—
—

—

3,096

(54,050)
(151)
4,051

(54,050)
(151)
7,782

—

(2,608)

— (2,608)

December 31, 2019 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

3,096

3,731

(2,608)

(50,150)

(45,931)

Net derivative liabilities as of January 1,  2020 .
Unrealized loss on derivative financial

instruments held for trading . . . . . . . . . . . .
Ineffective portion of cash flow hedges . . . . . .
Payment  for interest rate swaps termination . .
Proceeds from entering into interest rate

swaps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Payment  for CCS termination . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Effective portion of changes in the fair  value

of derivatives designated as cash flow
hedging instruments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Net derivative liabilities as of December 31,

Opening
balance

Cash flows

(45,931)

—

—
—
—
—
— 31,662

— (31,622)
4,052
—

Other
comprehensive
income

Non-cash
items

Total

—

—
—
—

—
—

— (45,931)

(64,044)
(323)
—

(64,044)
(323)
31,662

— (31,622)
—

(4,052)

—

—

2,498

—

2,498

2020 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

(45,931)

4,092

2,498

(68,419)

(107,760)

A reconciliation of lease liabilities arising from  financing activities is as follows:

Opening
balance

Cash flows

Non-cash
items

Total

Lease liabilities as of January 1, 2018 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Lease charge (Note 19) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Payments for interest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Payments for lease liability . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

213,428
—
— (10,520)
(7,329)
—

—
— 10,520

— 213,428
10,520
— (10,520)
(7,329)
—

Lease liabilities as of December 31, 2018 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

213,428

(17,849)

10,520

206,099

F-80

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

27. Cash Flow Reconciliations (Continued)

Opening
balance

Cash flows

Non-cash
items

Total

Lease liabilities as of January 1, 2019 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Lease charge (Note 19) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Additions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Payments for interest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Payments for lease liability . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

—
213,374
— 10,506
—
1,462
—
—
— (10,521)
(9,950)
—

— 213,374
10,506
1,462
— (10,521)
(9,891)
59

Lease liabilities as of December 31, 2019 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

213,374

(20,471)

12,027

204,930

Opening
balance

Cash flows

Non-cash
items

Total

Lease liabilities as of January 1, 2020 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Lease charge (Note 19) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Additions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Payments for interest . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Payments for lease liability . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

—
204,930
—
—
—
—
—
(9,911)
— (11,150)

— 204,930
9,921
2,155
(9,911)
(10,925)

9,921
2,155
—
225

Lease liabilities as of December 31, 2020 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

204,930

(21,061)

12,301

196,170

28. Taxation

Under the laws of the countries of the Group’s  domestication/incorporation and/or  vessels’

registration, the Group is not subject  to  tax on international shipping income. However,  it is subject to
registration and tonnage taxes, which  are  included in  vessel operating and supervision  costs in  the
consolidated statement of profit or loss.

Under the United States Internal Revenue Code of  1986, as amended (the ‘‘Code’’),  the U.S.
source gross transportation income of  a ship-owning or chartering corporation, such as GasLog, is
subject to a 4% U.S. Federal income  tax  without allowance for  deduction, unless  that  corporation
qualifies for exemption from tax under  Section  883 of the Code and the  Treasury  Regulations
promulgated thereunder. U.S. source gross transportation income consists  of 50% of the  gross shipping
income that is attributable to transportation that begins or  ends, but  that  does not both begin and end,
in the United States.

GasLog has qualified for the statutory tax exemption for the  year of  2020 and intends  to  continue

to qualify for the foreseeable future.

29. Earnings/(losses) per share (‘‘EPS’’)

Basic earnings/(losses) per share was calculated by dividing the profit/(loss)  for the  year

attributable to the owners of the common  shares after deducting the dividend on  Preference  Shares  by
the weighted average number of common shares issued and outstanding  during  the year.

Diluted EPS is calculated by dividing  the profit/(loss) for the year attributable to the  owners of the
Group adjusted for the effects of all dilutive potential ordinary shares  by the weighted average number

F-81

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

29. Earnings/(losses) per share (‘‘EPS’’)  (Continued)

of all potential ordinary shares assumed  to have been converted into common shares, unless  such
potential ordinary shares have an antidilutive effect.

The following reflects the earnings/(losses) and  share data  used  in the basic and  diluted earnings/

(losses) per share computations:

For the year ended December 31,

2018

2019

2020

Basic earnings/(loss) per share
Profit/(loss) for the year attributable to owners of  the Group . . .
Less: Dividends on Preference Shares . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

47,683
(10,063)

(100,661)
(10,063)

(44,948)
(10,063)

Profit/(loss) for the year attributable to owners of  the Group . . .
Weighted average number of shares outstanding, basic . . . . . . . .

37,620
80,792,837

(110,724)
80,849,818

(55,011)
88,011,160

Basic earnings/(loss) per share . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

0.47

(1.37)

(0.63)

Diluted earnings/(loss) per share
Profit/(loss) for the year attributable to owners of  the Group

used in the calculation of diluted EPS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Weighted average number of shares outstanding, basic . . . . . . . .
Dilutive  potential ordinary shares . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

37,620
80,792,837
844,185

(110,724)
80,849,818
—

(55,011)
88,011,160
—

Weighted average number of shares used in the calculation of

diluted EPS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

81,637,022

80,849,818

88,011,160

Diluted earnings/(loss) per share . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

0.46

(1.37)

(0.63)

The Group excluded the effect of 2,452,478  SARs, 643,853 RSUs and  501,444 PSUs in calculating

diluted EPS for the year ended December 31, 2020,  as they  were anti-dilutive (December 31, 2019:
2,630,173 SARs, 367,162 RSUs and nil PSUs, December 31, 2018: 555,453 SARs, nil RSUs and nil
PSUs).

30. Subsequent Events

On January 4, 2021, GasLog took delivery of the  GasLog Galveston, a 174,000 cbm LNG carrier

with X-DF propulsion constructed by  Samsung.

On January 22, 2021, GasLog’s subsidiary, GAS-twenty four  Ltd., completed  the sale  and leaseback

of the GasLog Houston with Hai Kuo Shipping 2051G Limited (‘‘Hai  Kuo Shipping’’).  The vessel was
sold to Hai Kuo Shipping. GasLog has leased  back the vessel under a bareboat charter from Hai Kuo
Shipping for a period of up to eight years. GasLog has the  obligation to re-purchase  the vessel at  end
of the charter period. GasLog has also  the  option to re-purchase the  vessel  on pre-agreed terms no
earlier than the end of the first interest  period  and  no later than  the end of year eight  of  the bareboat
charter. The vessel remains on its charter  with Shell.

On February 21, 2021, the board of directors declared a quarterly cash  dividend of  $0.05 per

common share payable on March 11, 2021 to shareholders of record as of March  4, 2021.

F-82

GasLog  Ltd. and its Subsidiaries
Notes to the consolidated financial statements  (Continued)
For the years ended December 31, 2018,  2019 and  2020
(All amounts expressed in thousands  of U.S. Dollars, except share and per  share data)

30. Subsequent Events (Continued)

On February 21, 2021 GasLog entered into an agreement  and plan of  merger (the ‘‘Merger
Agreement’’) with BlackRock’s Global Energy &  Power Infrastructure Team (collectively, ‘‘GEPIF’’),
pursuant to which GEPIF will acquire  all  of  the outstanding  common  shares of GasLog Ltd. that are
not held by certain existing shareholders  of GasLog Ltd. for a purchase price  of $5.80 in  cash per share
(the ‘‘Transaction’’). Following the consummation  of  the Transaction, certain existing shareholders,
including Blenheim Holdings, which is wholly owned by the  Livanos family, and a wholly owned
affiliate of the Onassis Foundation, will continue  to  hold approximately 55% of the outstanding
common shares of GasLog Ltd. and  GEPIF will hold approximately  45%.

F-83

The following companies are subsidiaries  of  GasLog Ltd.

SUBSIDIARIES OF GASLOG LTD.

Name  of Subsidiary

EXHIBIT 8.1

Jurisdiction of
Incorporation

Proportion of
Ownership
Interest

BVI
Monaco
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Delaware, U.S.

Singapore
Cyprus
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Greece
Panama

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . England and Wales

Gaslog Investments Ltd.
GasLog Monaco S.A.M.
GasLog LNG Services Ltd.
GasLog Carriers Ltd.
GasLog Shipping Company Ltd.
GasLog Services US Inc.
GasLog Services UK Ltd.
GasLog Asia Pte. Ltd.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GasLog Cyprus Investments Ltd. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GAS-one Ltd.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GAS-two  Ltd.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GAS-six Ltd.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GAS-nine Ltd.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GAS-ten Ltd.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GAS-fifteen Ltd.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GAS-eighteen Ltd.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GAS-twenty two Ltd.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GAS-twenty three Ltd.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GAS-twenty four Ltd.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GAS-twenty five Ltd.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GAS-twenty six Ltd.
GAS-twenty eight Ltd.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GAS-twenty nine Ltd. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GAS-thirty Ltd.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GAS-thirty one Ltd.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GAS-thirty two Ltd.
GAS-thirty three Ltd.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GAS-thirty four Ltd. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GAS-thirty five Ltd.
GAS-thirty six Ltd.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GAS-thirty seven Ltd. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GasLog Hellas-1 SME . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GAS-Two Panama S.A.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
GasLog Partners GP LLC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Marshall Islands
GasLog Partners LP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Marshall Islands
GasLog Partners Holdings LLC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Marshall Islands
GAS-three Ltd.
GAS-four Ltd.
GAS-five Ltd.
GAS-seven Ltd.
GAS-eight Ltd.
GAS-eleven Ltd.
GAS-twelve Ltd.
GAS-thirteen Ltd.
GAS-fourteen Ltd.
GAS-sixteen Ltd.
GAS-seventeen Ltd.
GAS-nineteen Ltd.
GAS-twenty Ltd.
GAS-twenty one Ltd.
GAS-twenty seven Ltd.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda
Bermuda

100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
100%
35.3%
35.3%
35.3%
35.3%
35.3%
35.3%
35.3%
35.3%
35.3%
35.3%
35.3%
35.3%
35.3%
35.3%
35.3%
35.3%
35.3%

EXHIBIT 12.1

I, Paul Wogan, certify that:

CERTIFICATION OF CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER

1.

I have reviewed this annual report on  Form 20-F of GasLog Ltd. (the  ‘‘Company’’);

2. Based on my  knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement  of  a material fact or

omit to state a material fact necessary  to  make the statements made,  in light  of the circumstances
under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period  covered by this
report;

3. Based on my  knowledge, the financial statements, and  other financial  information included in  this
report, fairly present in all material respects the financial  condition, results of operations and  cash
flows of the Company as of, and for, the periods presented in this report;

4. The Company’s other certifying officer and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining

disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in  Exchange  Act  Rules  13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e))
and  internal control over financial reporting  (as defined in  Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(f) and
15d-15(f)) for the Company and have:

(a) Designed such disclosure controls and procedures,  or caused such disclosure  controls and

procedures to be designed under our supervision,  to  ensure that material  information relating
to the Company, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others  within
those entities, particularly during the period in which  this  report is being prepared;

(b) Designed such internal control over financial reporting,  or caused such  internal control over
financial reporting to be designed under our  supervision, to  provide reasonable assurance
regarding the reliability of financial reporting  and  the preparation of financial statements for
external purposes in accordance with  generally accepted  accounting  principles;

(c) Evaluated the effectiveness of the Company’s disclosure controls  and procedures and

presented in this report our conclusions  about  the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and
procedures, as of the end of the period  covered  by this  report based on such evaluation; and

(d) Disclosed in this report any change in the Company’s internal control over  financial  reporting
that occurred during the period covered by the annual report that has  materially affected,  or
is reasonably likely to materially affect,  the Company’s internal control  over financial
reporting; and

5. The Company’s other certifying officer and I have  disclosed,  based on  our  most recent evaluation
of internal control  over financial reporting, to the Company’s auditors and the audit committee  of
the Company’s board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent  functions):

(a) All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation  of  internal

control over financial reporting which  are  reasonably likely  to  adversely affect  the Company’s
ability to record, process, summarize and report  financial information; and

(b) Any fraud, whether or not material,  that involves management or other employees  who have a

significant role in the Company’s internal control over financial  reporting.

Dated: March 5, 2021

By: /s/ PAUL A. WOGAN

Name: Paul A. Wogan
Title: Chief Executive Officer

EXHIBIT 12.2

I, Achilleas Tasioulas, certify that:

CERTIFICATION OF CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER

1.

I have reviewed this annual report  on Form 20-F of GasLog Ltd. (the  ‘‘Company’’);

2. Based on my knowledge, this report does  not  contain any untrue statement  of  a material fact or

omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made,  in light  of the circumstances
under which such statements were made, not misleading  with respect to the period  covered by this
report;

3. Based on my knowledge, the financial statements, and  other financial  information included in  this
report, fairly present in all material respects  the financial condition, results of operations and  cash
flows of the Company as of, and for,  the  periods presented in this report;

4. The Company’s other certifying  officer and I  are  responsible for establishing and maintaining

disclosure controls and procedures (as defined  in Exchange  Act  Rules  13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e))
and  internal control over financial reporting (as  defined in  Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(f) and
15d-15(f)) for the Company and have:

(a) Designed such disclosure controls and  procedures, or caused such disclosure  controls and

procedures to be designed under our  supervision, to ensure that material  information relating
to the Company, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is  made known to us by others  within
those entities, particularly during the period in  which this report is being prepared;

(b) Designed such internal control over  financial reporting,  or caused such  internal control over
financial reporting to be designed under  our supervision,  to  provide reasonable assurance
regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for
external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting  principles;

(c) Evaluated the effectiveness of the  Company’s  disclosure controls  and procedures and

presented in this report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and
procedures, as of the end of the period covered by this report based on such evaluation; and

(d) Disclosed in this report any change in  the Company’s internal control over  financial  reporting
that occurred during the period covered by  the  annual report that has  materially affected,  or
is reasonably likely to materially affect, the Company’s internal control  over financial
reporting; and

5. The Company’s other certifying  officer and I  have disclosed,  based on  our  most recent evaluation
of internal control over financial reporting,  to  the Company’s auditors and the audit committee  of
the Company’s board of directors (or  persons performing  the equivalent  functions):

(a) All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation  of  internal

control over financial reporting which are reasonably likely  to  adversely affect  the Company’s
ability to record, process, summarize and report financial information; and

(b) Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees  who have a

significant role in the Company’s internal control over  financial  reporting.

Dated: March 5, 2021

By: /s/ ACHILLEAS TASIOULAS

Name: Achilleas Tasioulas
Title: Chief Financial Officer

EXHIBIT 13.1

CERTIFICATION PURSUANT TO
18 U.S.C. SECTION 1350
AS ADOPTED PURSUANT TO SECTION 906 OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002

In connection with the annual report  on Form 20-F  of  GasLog Ltd., a  Bermuda exempted

company (the ‘‘Company’’), for the period ending December 31, 2020,  as filed with  the Securities and
Exchange Commission on the date hereof  (the  ‘‘Report’’), the undersigned officer of the Company
certifies pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section  1350, as adopted  pursuant  to  Section 906 of  the Sarbanes-Oxley
Act of 2002, that:

1.

2.

the Report fully complies with the requirements of  Section 13(a) or 15(d)  of  the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934; and

the information contained in the Report fairly presents,  in all  material respects, the financial
condition and results of operations of  the Company  as of, and for, the periods  presented  in
the report.

The foregoing certification is provided  solely for purposes  of complying  with the provisions of
Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of  2002 and  is not intended to be used or  relied upon for  any
other  purpose.

Date: March 5, 2021

By: /s/ PAUL A. WOGAN

Name: Paul A. Wogan
Title: Chief Executive Officer

EXHIBIT 13.2

CERTIFICATION PURSUANT TO
18 U.S.C. SECTION 1350
AS ADOPTED PURSUANT TO SECTION 906 OF THE SARBANES-OXLEY ACT OF 2002

In connection with the annual report  on Form 20-F  of  GasLog Ltd., a  Bermuda exempted

company (the ‘‘Company’’), for the period ending December 31, 2020,  as filed with  the Securities and
Exchange Commission on the date hereof  (the  ‘‘Report’’), the undersigned officer of the Company
certifies pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section  1350, as adopted  pursuant  to  Section 906 of  the Sarbanes-Oxley
Act of 2002, that:

1.

2.

the Report fully complies with the requirements of  Section 13(a) or 15(d)  of  the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934; and

the information contained in the Report fairly presents,  in all  material respects, the financial
condition and results of operations of  the Company  as of, and for, the periods  presented  in
the report.

The foregoing certification is provided  solely for purposes  of complying  with the provisions of
Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of  2002 and  is not intended to be used or  relied upon for  any
other  purpose.

Date: March 5, 2021

By: /s/ ACHILLEAS TASIOULAS

Name: Achilleas Tasioulas
Title: Chief Financial Officer

CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT REGISTERED  PUBLIC  ACCOUNTING FIRM

We consent to the  incorporation by reference in Registration Statements No. 333-239797 on

Form F-3, No. 333-230205 on Form F-3 and No. 333-187020 on Form S-8, of our reports dated
March 5, 2021, relating to the consolidated financial statements of GasLog Ltd., and the effectiveness
of GasLog Ltd.’s internal control over financial reporting,  appearing in this Annual Report  on
Form 20-F of GasLog Ltd. for the year ended December 31, 2020.

EXHIBIT 23.1

Deloitte LLP

London, United Kingdom

March 5, 2021