Updated
Updated · Euronews · Jun 4
EU Shelves Full Russian Tanker Services Ban as 15% Oil-Cap Revision Looms
Updated
Updated · Euronews · Jun 4

EU Shelves Full Russian Tanker Services Ban as 15% Oil-Cap Revision Looms

2 articles · Updated · Euronews · Jun 4

Summary

  • Brussels officials now see almost no chance of activating the full maritime-services ban approved in April, leaving the measure on hold indefinitely despite public backing from the Commission, Baltics and Nordics.
  • High oil prices and Strait of Hormuz disruption have changed the sanctions calculus, while G7 partners have shown little appetite to join; the US has already issued three waivers on Russian oil.
  • Greece and Malta remain key internal obstacles, arguing an EU-only ban would hurt their shipping interests, open loopholes, strengthen Russia's shadow fleet and shift business to Chinese and Indian rivals.
  • Attention is shifting to the existing Russian oil price cap, which under EU rules must stay 15% below average market prices; after Urals crude rose, diplomats expect the 15 July revision to move higher, not lower.
  • That leaves the mid-June G7 meeting in Evian as the next test of allied coordination, even as the EU prepares a fresh sanctions package and tries to avoid easing pressure on Moscow.

Insights

Can the G7 fix its oil price cap 'loophole' before it automatically hands a windfall to Russia in July?
Will Greece's opposition, fearing a 'shadow fleet,' permanently sink the EU's toughest sanctions on Russian oil?
Are Ukrainian drone strikes now more effective than Western sanctions at cutting Russia's oil revenue?