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European Oil Markets
30JUN

US crude waiver lapses, no successor

2 min read
17:30UTC

The US General License 134C crude waiver expired on 17 June with no successor issued, and the gap has now run 26 days, the longest of the war.

EconomicAssessed
Key takeaway

The US crude waiver lapsed on 17 June with no successor, the gap now 26 days and counting.

The US crude-oil waiver known as General License 134C expired on 17 June with no replacement issued since, according to S&P Global 1. The waiver ran as three consecutive thirty-day licences that softened the sanctions hit on buyers of Russian crude; as of 13 July the gap has reached 26 days, the longest of the war, against the fifteen-day gap recorded on 1 July .

OFAC, the US Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control, has announced nothing. The lapse is read from the absence of any new licence across OFAC's recent-actions listings and the specialist trackers that logged all three prior iterations within a day, not from any Treasury decision to let it fall 2. It should not be confused with the separate Lukoil retail-sale licence that expires on 25 July.

The crude cover fell away in the same fortnight the diesel export ban took effect, narrowing Russia's fiscal room just as the physical fuel squeeze turned hardest.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

OFAC is the part of the US Treasury that decides which sanctions exemptions apply to Russian oil. Three times this year it issued a short licence letting buyers keep purchasing Russian crude that was loaded before a cut-off date, each time renewing it within a day or two of the old one expiring. This time, the licence expired on 17 June and, as of 13 July, 26 days have passed with no replacement. This matters because that 26-day gap is far longer than any previous pause, and it has now gone unrenewed for longer than the licence itself normally lasts. Buyers who relied on that legal cover for Russian crude cargoes are operating without it.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

OFAC administers the crude waiver as a discretionary licence renewed in short windows rather than a standing exemption, which means silence is itself an active policy outcome: without an affirmative renewal, the underlying sanctions apply in full by default.

The 30-day bridge structure was built for administrative flexibility, but it also means a single missed renewal cycle, if it becomes two, functions as a de facto termination without Treasury having to announce one.

Escalation

Direction: the gap has widened from 15 days (as of 1 July) to 26 days (as of 13 July) with no successor licence and no public Treasury statement of intent, consistent with a deliberate wind-down rather than an administrative delay.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Buyers still routing Russian crude purchases through US-linked insurance or banking lose their legal cover for cargoes loaded after 17 June until a successor licence, if any, is issued.

First Reported In

Update #23 · Moscow rations diesel as US cover lapses

S&P Global· 13 Jul 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
US crude waiver lapses, no successor
Russia loses the US licence that eased trade in its crude just as its domestic fuel squeeze peaks.
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