European Union countries are close to agreeing a deal on a proposed 12th package of sanctions on Russia focused on a Russia-origin diamond ban and new measures to stem the flow of Russian oil, according to four people familiar with the matter.
While the biggest part of the new measures is the ban on non-industrial Russian diamonds, EU countries have also been looking to make it harder to circumvent existing sanctions, including the G7 oil price cap.
However, one element aimed at preventing Russia from growing its so-called “shadow fleet” has been watered down.
The Commission initially wanted to ban the sale of old tankers to Russian entities or for their use in Russia as well as to entities that might may use the tankers to circumvent the G7 oil price cap but this clause has been dropped. One of the sources said Mediterranean countries with strong shipping companies were concerned the measures could put them at a competitive disadvantage.
Officials from EU member states are meeting on Monday evening and are expected to further tweak the text but not substantially, the sources said, adding it could even be passed later on Monday.
“I think we have a more or less stable text,” one of them said.
The European Commission declined to comment.
Article 12G, or the “No Russia clause”, in the proposal has also been refined to a shorter list of dual-use goods, including weapons, as the majority of EU countries said the initial custom codes were too sweeping and would hurt their global trade.
In the proposed package, EU companies will have to make their counterparties sign contracts prohibiting re-export to Russia. The article will apply to pre-existing contracts with a transition phased, the sources said.
The latest working draft has also dropped the requirement for prior authorisation from member states for “any transfer of funds” by a Russian entity or Russian national residing in Russia out of the EU. Instead the banks and Russian entities or individuals will have to notify respective EU national regulators about transfers of at least 100,000 euros ($107,510), who would then report them to the EU executive.
The biggest point of contention remains the exemption of sanctioned goods for personal use, with member states at odds on whether to exempt cars with Russian license plates entering the EU.
Member states are also still negotiating transition times for import bans on some metal products, such as steel slabs and iron.
The most significant new measure is a direct ban on the import of non-industrial Russian diamonds from Jan. 1, which sources say has been agreed, as well as a phased indirect ban of Russian diamonds from other sources.
The latter will be done in concert with the Group of Seven countries that last week announced their own Russian diamond ban.
($1 = 0.9301 euros)
/Reuters/