The European Union has reached an agreement on an 18th sanctions package targeting Russia’s energy industry and shadow fleet, EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas announced on Friday.
Kallas stated that the package would target 105 additional shadow fleet ships, their enablers, and limit Russian banks’ access to funding.
An import ban has also been introduced for refined petroleum products made from Russian crude oil in third countries, as part of a further effort to throttle Moscow’s economy.
However, Russia has so far managed to sell most of its oil above the previous price cap, as the current mechanism makes it unclear who is supposed to police its implementation.
“Neither the price cap for Russian oil nor adding shadow fleet tankers on a sanction list managed to disrupt Russian oil exports so far, so the market remains skeptical of the impact of the latest sanctions,” UBS analyst Giovanni Staunovo recently said.
Zelenskyy also highlighted the EU’s decision to ban all transactions related to the Nord Stream gas pipelines, describing the construction of the network as part of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s “preparation for the full-scale war.”
Moscow responded to the new raft of sanctions by suggesting that they would not have a significant impact on Russia.
The European Union has imposed multiple rounds of sanctions on Moscow since it invaded Ukraine in February 2022.
Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban previously signaled that they would block future EU sanctions against Moscow, as both nations rely on Russian gas and oil supplies.
Nevertheless, the 19th round of EU sanctions is already underway, according to the Estonian Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
The new European sanctions came on the heels of a threat by U.S. President Donald Trump for harsher measures from across the Atlantic.
This has led Trump to say he is considering throwing his support behind a bill sponsored by Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) that would impose sweeping sanctions on Russia, including 500 percent tariffs on countries still buying Russian oil, gas, uranium, and other exports. The bill is currently working its way through the U.S. Senate and could be debated later this month, according to Senate Majority Leader John Thune (R-S.D.).
Secondary tariffs are a newer form of economic action that entail a duty imposed on goods coming from third-party countries that trade with countries sanctioned by the United States.







