
G7
Forum of seven advanced economies: US, UK, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Canada; plus EU.
Last refreshed: 6 July 2026 · Appears in 6 active topics
Can the G7 hold together over Iran and Ukraine while France and the US diverge on digital sovereignty?
Timeline for G7
PABS talks reopen under a deadline
Pandemics and BiosecurityMentioned in: Japan reopens Iran oil talks after 2019
Iran Conflict 2026Failed to reverse Anthropic export controls at Evian summit 15-17 June
AI: Jobs, Power & Money: Anthropic AI ban enters its second weekEnded without a joint communique for the first time in recent memory after Iran deal disputes between members
Iran Conflict 2026: Modi raised dead sailors; Trump gave nilMentioned in: Iskander gap exposes the Patriot shortage
Russia-Ukraine War 2026What countries are in the G7?
Why did the G7 split over the Iran conflict?
Background
The Group of Seven (G7) is an intergovernmental forum comprising the seven largest advanced economies: the United States, the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, and Canada. The European Union participates as a non-enumerated member without a rotating presidency. Member heads of government meet annually at a rotating summit, supported by working groups of finance ministers, foreign ministers, and other cabinet-level officials throughout the year. The G7 operates by consensus and has no permanent secretariat.
The forum originated as the G6 in 1975, convened by French President Valery Giscard d'Estaing in response to the 1973 oil shock and the collapse of the Bretton Woods monetary system. Canada joined in 1976 to form the G7. Russia was admitted in 1998 to form the G8 but was suspended in 2014 following its annexation of Crimea and formally excluded in 2022 after the full invasion of Ukraine. The G7 remains a forum for economic coordination on trade, financial regulation, climate, and geopolitical crises, though its decisions carry political rather than legal weight.
In 2026 the G7 showed significant fractures over the Iran conflict. Secretary of State Rubio told G7 foreign ministers in March that the war would continue two to four more weeks, the first US acknowledgement of duration. France and Japan protested at the Hormuz blockade, while the UK, Germany, and Australia refused to join it, leading the UK to convene a 40-nation rival coalition. The divergence signalled the deepest G7 rift on US military action since Iraq in 2003. On the oil markets front, the G7 set and revised the Russian crude price cap, with OFAC General Licence 134B expiring on 16 May 2026 with no rollover; the EU's 20th sanctions package established the legal basis for a full maritime-services prohibition pending G7 coordination.
The 52nd G7 leaders' summit was convened at Evian-les-Bains, France, 15-17 June 2026 under the French presidency. The Russia oil price cap was a central agenda item: the EU had proposed the 21st sanctions package on 9 June with the explicit aim of freezing the cap at $44.10/BBL before the 15 July 2026 formula review, which on the current high Urals average would otherwise auto-lift the cap toward approximately $75/BBL. France, as host, pressed partners to coordinate on the cap freeze alongside the Iran and Ukraine agendas.
The G7 Digital and Technology Ministerial Declaration, signed at Bercy in Paris on 29 May 2026 under French chairmanship, contained no mention of cloud sovereignty, CAIDA, or restrictions on US cloud providers. Its four agreed priorities (AI security, AI openness for smaller firms, digital-sector resilience, and child safety online) held to the Hiroshima AI Process framework rather than France's own "Cloud au Centre" doctrine. France had built the Bercy ministerial as the international launch pad for the EU's Tech Sovereignty Package; the Package had failed to adopt on 27 May, the same days G7 working groups concluded preparatory talks. What the agenda foreshadowed, the final signed declaration confirmed: cloud sovereignty was absent from both. The communique text sat closer to Washington's framing than to France's own sovereignty doctrine.