EU proposes fresh sanctions on Russia after 'sham referendums' in Ukraine
The European Union aims to impose a price cap on Russian oil and further restrict commercial links with Moscow with a fresh package of sanctions announced on Wednesday by Ursula von der Leyen.The latest proposal comes in direct response to the referendums held in four Russian-occupied regions of Ukraine and the decree of partial mobilisation signed last week by Vladimir Putin to bring up to 300,000 reservists into the national army.The votes are seen as a prelude to annexation.«Russia has escalated the invasion of Ukraine to a new level,» the European Commission president said on Wednesday afternoon.«We do not accept the sham referenda nor any kind of annexation in Ukraine and we’re determined to make the Kremlin pay for this further escalation.»The proposed round of sanctions will introduce new import bans to keep certain Russian products out of the EU market and deprive the Kremlin of 7 € billion in revenues, von der Leyen said.Exports of EU-made goods, particularly key technology used in the Russian military, such as aviation, electronic and chemical components, will also be prohibited.«These new export bans will additionally weaken Russia’s economic base and will weaken its capacity to modernise,» the president said, without providing further details about the specific bans.Notably, the sanctions will forbid EU nationals from sitting on governing boards of Russia’s state-owned companies. The case of former German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder, who had links with Nord Stream, Rosneft and Gazprom, attracted this year heavy criticism from inside and outside Germany.«Russia should not benefit from European knowledge and expertise,» the Commission chief said, without mentioning Schröder by name.Price cap on Russian oilAccording to von der Leyen, the latest EU sanctions provides the bloc with the «legal basis» to implement the price cap on Russian oil agreed by G7 countries earlier this month.Fossil fuels are Russia’s main source of revenues, which the West suspects are funnelled into the costly invasion of Ukraine.The G7 economies want to impose the cap by barring their insurance and shipping companies from helping Russia sell oil at prices that exceed the agreed-upon limit.Commercial oil tankers need insurance to cover the costs of incidents beyond their control, such as delays, damage to supplies, theft or even war.EU and UK-based insurers enjoy a dominant position in this services market, making it difficult for Russian vessels to find coverage elsewhere.As the G7 is already phasing out Russian oil, the price cap is supposed to apply to the crude and refined products sold to other international markets, giving the sanction an extraterritorial dimension.«This oil cap will help reduce Russia’s revenues and keep global energy markets stable,» von der Leyen said.It’s still unclear how many countries outside the G7 will be willing to participate in the untested scheme, which in practice amounts to the establishment of a cartel.India and China have in recent months ramped up purchases of Russian oil, which Moscow sells with a pronounced discount. The current difference between a barrel of Brent and Urals crude is 23. $The level of the G7 cap is yet to be defined.
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