US Sectoral Sanctions
EU Sectoral Sanctions
Overview
The EU sanctions regime (in Council Reg. No 833/2014 of 31 July 2014, most recently amended by
Reg. 2019/1163 of 5 July 2019 focuses on financial, energy, and dual-use/ military sectors
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Now in effect to 31 Jan. 2021 (and likely to keep being extended for now)
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Was fairly well coordinated with US ... but no longer, with CAATSA / Nord Stream / secondary sanctions, etc.
E.g.: no sanctions on anything re Russian gas-focused projects (given Europe's dependence on Russian
gas supplies) ... and maybe not interpreted to cover condensate (see slide 24 above)?
And no sanctions on any oil & gas projects with Russian participation outside Russia (or on Russian energy
export pipelines)
And guidance notice exempting mere correspondent banking (payment / settlement services) from the loan /
credit bans - thus more lenient than analogous US rule / interpretation (but see slide 84 re new UK interp.)
And, unlike the US, no broad-reach blacklisting into leading commercial entities, CEOs of leading state-owned
cos. (and no Rosneft for business with Venezuela, no Chinese cos. for business with Iran, etc.)
Much easier to grasp the basic EU rules than the US ones (and all the more so now, with all the newer US
acts and regs.) - essentially all in one document's four corners
But the devil (?) is in the diversity:
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Each member state competent authority interprets, authorizes (where called for) or denies, enforces, and
sets/imposes its own penalties
Unlike the US... where this is all a uniform, federal-level matter
Though some coordination / consistency is called for in the Regulation
And see EU Commission Guidance Note of 16 Dec. 2014 (as amended most recently 25 Aug. 2017) - FAQS
Morgan Lewis
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