Two OFAC clocks converge on one supply problem. General Licence 134C, the vessel-services umbrella covering Russian crude loaded by 17 April, expires 12:01 EDT on Wednesday 17 June with no successor GL 134D announced as of 04 June, a 13-day cliff. 1 OFAC is the US Treasury sanctions bureau, and its general licences carve targeted exemptions inside the broader Russia regime. The umbrella runs through insurance, crewing and bunkering cover, not the cargo, so the binding cost of a lapse is hull uninsurability rather than a barrel ban.
GL 134C was signed on 18 May , the instrument that eased the Baltic Aframax compliance bid on the TD7 and TD19 routes . Its lapse without a rollover reloads exactly that bid. Russia is already loading above quota out of Baltic terminals, so the cover withdrawal lands on barrels that have nowhere compliant to sail.
Separately, the Lukoil divestiture advanced. Ludoil Energy, a Cyprus-registered buyer, signed a sale agreement on Monday 18 May for GOI Energy's stake in the ISAB Priolo Gargallo refinery in Sicily, a two-phase deal starting with 51%, pending Italian Golden Power clearance and a separate OFAC transaction licence. 2 General Licence 131F authorises negotiation only and runs to 27 June . The signing partly answers the prior 'no buyer can meet FAQ 1224' framing, but a signed contract is not a closed sale under a negotiation-only licence, and Ludoil cannot complete without a further authorisation before the clock runs out.
