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Cuba Dispatch
28MAY

Treasury extends Russian oil cover to Cuba

4 min read
08:42UTC

Treasury issued OFAC General Licence 134B on Saturday 18 April, authorising the next Sovcomflot tanker's cargo through 16 May and contradicting the Florida delegation's 75-day-old revocation demand.

PoliticsDeveloping
Key takeaway

GL 134B legalised the next Russian tanker into Cuba while the Florida revocation letter sat unanswered for 75 days.

US Treasury issued OFAC General Licence 134B on Saturday 18 April 2026, authorising transactions in Russian crude loaded before 17 April and running through 16 May. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent justified the licence on grounds the oil was "already in transit" and would not deliver Russia "significant financial benefits". OFAC is the Office of Foreign Assets Control, the Treasury division that administers US sanctions. The cargo most directly covered is the Universal, a 50,923 DWT Sovcomflot tanker carrying roughly 700,000 barrels of crude expected at Matanzas around Wednesday 29 April.

GL 134B is the second consecutive 30-day wind-down extension from OFAC, following GL 134A on 19 March. It sits inside the EO 14380 sanctions architecture that took effect in late January and nominally authorises secondary tariffs against third countries shipping crude to Havana. Secondary tariffs are penalties Treasury can impose on insurers, banks and shipping firms doing business with sanctioned suppliers; a wind-down general licence narrows that exposure for the specific cargoes the licence names. The instrument lets enforcement claim a hard line in public while permitting transactions already in flight to settle.

A parallel Venezuela private-sector licence dated 25 March has moved no crude at all. The PDVSA carve-out from a sister Treasury action walled off Cuban state buyers from Venezuelan oil entirely, which means Sovcomflot tankers from the Baltic are now the island's last resupply line. The Florida congressional delegation that demanded a comprehensive licence purge in February has heard nothing back from Treasury for 75 days. Two consecutive wind-down extensions covering Sovcomflot deliveries signal an enforcement posture more permissive than the headline.

If a third extension follows in mid-May, the GL 134/A/B sequence becomes a de facto 60-day rolling licence for Sovcomflot deliveries to Cuba. Insurance and shipping markets will then price these extensions as predictable rather than exceptional, eroding the deterrent effect of secondary tariffs on subsequent Russian cargoes.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The US Treasury has a division called OFAC that enforces sanctions. On 18 April it issued what is called a General Licence, a written permission slip telling shipping companies, insurers and banks that they will not be punished for handling a specific Russian oil cargo already loaded onto a ship. This is the second permission slip in a row, following one issued on 19 March. The permission directly covers the next Russian oil tanker heading to Cuba. Without it, every company involved in moving that ship would face US financial penalties. With it, the cargo is legally cleared through 16 May. The US government's public position is that Russia is not supposed to supply Cuba; the licence means that in practice, this particular delivery is allowed.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

OFAC's general-licence tool exists precisely to manage the gap between a public sanctions posture and the operational reality of cargoes already loaded and financed. Once a tanker departs a Russian port with contracted crude, forcing a mid-ocean default would expose US banks and insurers to breach-of-contract liability under the contracts pre-dating the sanction. Treasury's legal risk calculus favours a wind-down licence over a mid-voyage default, independent of the political headline.

The PDVSA state carve-out in the 18 March licence removed Venezuela as Cuba's alternative supplier at the state level, making Sovcomflot deliveries the only available resupply route. Treasury cannot easily revoke GL 134B without triggering the grid failure that EO 14380's own humanitarian carve-out provisions are designed to prevent.

What could happen next?
  • Precedent

    Two consecutive GL 134 extensions covering Sovcomflot deliveries to Cuba establish a renewable 30-day carve-out pattern that shipping and insurance markets will price as predictable, reducing the deterrent effect of EO 14380 secondary tariffs on future Russian deliveries.

    Short term · 0.82
  • Risk

    If Treasury declines to issue GL 134C in mid-May, Cuba's grid faces a supply cliff: the Universal's cargo covers approximately nine to ten days of demand, and no alternative supplier has a licensed route to the island.

    Short term · 0.78
  • Consequence

    The 75-day Treasury silence on the Florida-delegation revocation letter, combined with GL 134B issuance, weakens the delegation's standing as the operational anchor of the administration's Cuba sanctions posture.

    Medium term · 0.75
First Reported In

Update #2 · Two Cuba policies, one fortnight

CubaHeadlines· 27 Apr 2026
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