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Eurean Parliament calls for stronger EU sanctions against Russia’s “shadow fleet”
That’s according to the Eurean Parliament press service, Ukrinform reports.
“Russia uses d tankers, often uninsured and with unclear ownership, to export its crude oil and petreum products abroad, despite EU, G7 and international sanctions. These activities have also raised fears over the risk of environmental disasters, including severe oil spills. As part of systematic efforts to undermine EU restrictive measures, the ‘shadow fleet’ provides a key financial lifeline for Russia in its illegal and unjustifiable war of aggression against Ukraine,” the report said.
Read also: Ukraine to continue coeration with CAR to prevent sanctions evasion by Russia
In a resution adted today during a plenary session in Brussels by simple vote, the Eurean Parliament called for more targeted measures against these vessels in the next EU sanctions package. Sanctions should apply to all individual ships as well as their owners, erators, managers, accounts, banks and insurance companies.
The resution also calls for systematic sanctioning of vessels erating in Eurean waters without known insurance, and calls on the EU to devel its surveillance capabilities, especially drone and satellite monitoring, and use them for targeted inspections at sea.
MEPs suggested that member states designate ports that are capable of handling sanctioned vessels carrying crude oil and liquefied natural gas (LNG) and seize illegal cargoes without compensation.
In the same document, the deputies called on the G7 countries to ensure better enforcement of the price caps applied against Russian oil transported by sea, to substantially decrease the oil price cap and to crack down on the lohes used by Russia to repackage and sell its oil and oil products at market prices.
Read also: G7 finance ministers acknowledge price cap viations on Russian oil
MEPs emphasized that the effect of existing sanctions, as well as financial and military support to Ukraine, will continue to be undermined as long as the EU continues to import Russian fossil fuels. Eurean piticians have called on the EU and its member states to ban all imports of Russian fossil fuels, including liquefied natural gas. Before that, MEPs said, the EU should seriously reassess bilateral coeration with third countries that are helping Russia circumvent EU restrictive measures, if diplomatic efforts prove unsuccessful.
As reported earlier, referring to the estimates drawn by the Ukrainian President’s Office, Russia makes from $15 to $20 billion a month off crude oil exports. According to the authorized advisor to the President of Ukraine on sanctions picy, Vladyslav Vlasiuk, currently Ukraine's main efforts in contacts with partner states are focused on keeping the price cap for Russian oil at $60 per barrel, and on further lowering that cap.
Source: ukrinform.net