Russia had held 30 crewmembers of Greenpeace's Arctic Sunrise ship for over two months after activists in September scaled an oil rig in the Barents Sea owned by energy giant Gazprom to protest its oil drilling in the sensitive area.
Those released by courts in Saint Petersburg -- in a move that surprised some -- are unlikely to immediately be able to go home. They still face trial on charges that risk several years in jail.
Also granted bail today were Paul Ruzycki from Canada, Tomasz Dziemianczuk from Poland, Italy's Cristian D'Alessandro and Camila Speziale, who holds dual Italian-Argentine citizenship.
Later in the day Francesco Pisanu of France and Finland's Sini Saarela were also granted bail for the same sum. Saarela was one of the two climbers who managed to attach themselves to the Gazprom platform.
None of those granted bail has been freed yet, with the process requiring the transfer of the bail funds by Greenpeace followed by confirmation that the money has been received.