The U.S.-EU Trade and Technology Council hopes to make progress around the idea of a new multilateral export control regime by the TTC’s next ministerial meeting this fall, Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo said. She said the group is thinking about which U.S. and EU technologies are “especially significant” and warrant multilateral controls, such as semiconductor equipment.
Iran is considering exporting natural gas to Europe in a potential bid to capitalize on international sanctions against Russian energy. An Iranian oil and gas ministry official said officials are “studying it but have yet to reach a conclusion,” the ministry’s news agency, Shana, said May 15. “However, Iran always seeks development of energy diplomacy and expanding the market.” The official didn’t say how it would export its product, which is subject to strict U.S. sanctions.
The EU could cap the price of natural gas to skirt high energy costs if Russia limits or cuts off the flow of gas, Bloomberg reported May 15. The European Commission is considering a package of energy-market intervention steps to replace Russian gas, according to a draft document seen by Bloomberg News. Concerns over Russian retaliation to EU sanctions grow as Russia's economy suffers from restrictions placed on it after its invasion of Ukraine. Importers are worried over how to pay for Russian gas while avoiding breaching sanctions, Bloomberg said.
The Commerce Department again renewed a temporary export denial order for Mahan Airways because the airline continues to violate the order and the Export Administration Regulations, according to a May 13 notice. Mahan Airways has been on the banned list since 2008, and Commerce said the Iranian airline increased its services into Moscow in April after the U.S. and other countries imposed sanctions and export controls against Russia for its invasion of Ukraine (see 2202240069 and 2203180049). The latest renewal is for 180 days from May 13.
International sanctions against Belarus have blocked about $16 billion-$18 billion worth of its annual exports to Western nations since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February, Reuters reported May 15. Belarusian Prime Minister Roman Golovchenko told a state-owned media outlet this week that “almost all of Belarus' exports to the European Union and North America have been blocked” since the sanctions were imposed, according to the report. Belarus has been subject to many of the same sanctions and export controls applied to Russia because it has aided Moscow’s military in its war in Ukraine (see 2204080062 and 2204080008).
The US-EU Trade and Technology Council needs to limit its ambitions if it is to be successful, said Tyson Barker, head of the Technology and Global Affairs Program at the German Council on Foreign Relations, during a Washington International Trade Association webinar May 13.
The U.K. issued a General License May 12 allowing the Amsterdam Trade Bank, a subsidiary of the Russian Alfa-Bank, to make payments for its basic needs. ATB was listed under the U.K.'s Russia sanctions regime. The license, titled "Amsterdam Trade Bank N.V -- winding down, basic needs and insolvency related payments," permits any individual to make, receive or process any payments in connection with any insolvency proceeding with ATB. The license also allows any individual to wind down any transactions with ATB or a subsidiary. It expires May 12, 2023.
Switzerland froze $2.2 billion in Russian assets in the past five weeks, Swiss official Erwin Bollinger said at a government briefing May 12, Bloomberg reported. The total amount frozen by Switzerland now stands at nearly $6.3 billion -- a number that is down since April 7 because around $3.4 billion was released after being frozen on a precautionary basis, Bloomberg said. The announcement comes after Kremlin critic Bill Browder said at a U.S. government-sponsored briefing on Russian money that the U.S. should reconsider its legal cooperation with Switzerland, Bloomberg reported. Despite Switzerland imposing sanctions on Russia that mirror the EU's, greater attention is being paid to the Swiss role as a haven for Russian money.
The U.K. added 12 individuals to its Russian sanctions regime in a May 13 notice. The listed parties are Alina Kabaeva, National Media Group board chair, and her grandmother, Anna Zatseplina; Viktor Khmarin, Russian lawyer linked to Russian President Vladimir Putin; Mikhail Klishin, SOGAZ insurance company board member; Vladimir Kolbin, Russian businessman; Lyudmila Ocheretnaya, Putin's ex-wife; Aleksandr Plekhov, Russian businessman; Igor Putin, director of International Sea Port of Pechenga; Mikhail Putin, Putin's cousin; Roman Putin, MRT Group of Companies board chair; Yuri Shamalov, Gazfond president; Mikhail Shelomov, Putin's cousin; and Anna Zatseplina, Kabaeva's grandmother.
The U.S. and the EU this week plan to announce a range of new initiatives through the Trade and Technology Council, including more collaboration on export controls and additional efforts to secure semiconductor supply chains, a senior administration official said. The official, speaking to reporters May 13 ahead of the TTC's second meeting May 15-16 in Paris, said the two sides will “deepen the partnership and announce a number of key outcomes.”