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Igor Sechin
PersonRU

Igor Sechin

CEO of Rosneft since 2012; his son Ivan was designated by OFAC on 28 May 2026.

Last refreshed: 1 June 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic

Key Question

Why was Igor Sechin's son added to the US sanctions list in May 2026?

Timeline for Igor Sechin

#428 May
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Common Questions
Who is Igor Sechin and why does he matter for Russian oil?
Igor Sechin is the chief executive of Rosneft, Russia's largest oil producer at roughly 4 million Barrels Per Day. He is one of Putin's closest associates and a central figure in Russia's state energy sector, personally sanctioned by the EU and UK since 2022.Source: Lowdown european-oil-markets briefing
Was Igor Sechin sanctioned by the US in 2026?
Igor Sechin himself was not newly designated in May 2026, but OFAC added his son Ivan Sechin to the SDN list on 28 May 2026 under the Russia Executive Order 14024. Igor Sechin has faced EU and UK personal sanctions since 2022.Source: Lowdown european-oil-markets briefing
Does Rosneft still supply crude oil to European refineries?
Yes. Rosneft continues to supply crude to several European refineries via the Druzhba pipeline, including PCK Schwedt in Germany and refiners in Hungary and Slovakia, which are covered by EU carve-outs from the oil embargo.Source: Lowdown european-oil-markets briefing

Background

Igor Ivanovich Sechin has served as chief executive of Rosneft, Russia's largest state oil company, since 2012, and as executive chairman since 2004. A close associate of Vladimir Putin since the early 1990s in St. Petersburg, he is among the most powerful figures in the Russian energy sector. Rosneft produces roughly 4 million Barrels Per Day, accounting for approximately 40 per cent of Russia's total crude output. Sechin has been personally sanctioned by the EU and UK since 2022 under measures linked to Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

Sechin returned to headlines on 28 May 2026 when OFAC added his son Ivan Sechin to the SDN list under Executive Order 14024, the Russia sanctions programme. The designation was read by analysts as an escalation of personal-liability pressure on senior Rosneft figures rather than a direct operational restriction on the company. OFAC's action was taken simultaneously with the tanker designation of RISE GLORY under counter-terrorism authority, signalling a coordinated tightening of sanctions enforcement in both the Russia and Iran tracks.

Sechin's wider significance for European oil markets derives from Rosneft's continued supply of crude to refiners in Germany (PCK Schwedt), Hungary, and Slovakia via the Druzhba pipeline, which remains under an EU carve-out from the oil embargo. Any escalation of individual designations tied to Rosneft leadership raises the compliance risk for European buyers who remain contractually or structurally dependent on Druzhba volumes.

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