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European Oil Markets
4JUN

Two OFAC clocks, one supply problem

4 min read
10:20UTC

OFAC's General Licence 134C lapses 12:01 EDT on Wednesday 17 June with no successor announced, a 13-day cliff, while Ludoil Energy's signed ISAB deal faces a separate 27 June negotiation deadline.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

Two June OFAC deadlines reload Russian-supply risk through insurance cover and a refinery-sale clock, not a barrel embargo.

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.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The US Treasury's sanctions office (OFAC) uses 'general licences' to create temporary exceptions to sanctions rules. Two of these licences are about to run out, and both matter for European oil supply. The first, General Licence 134C, has been allowing ships to keep their insurance when carrying Russian oil that was loaded before mid-April. Without insurance, ships cannot legally operate in most ports. That licence expires on 17 June. If the US does not renew it, ships carrying that Russian oil lose their insurance cover, making it much harder and more expensive to deliver. The second licence, General Licence 131F, allows the Cypriot energy company Ludoil to negotiate buying a large oil refinery in Sicily , the ISAB refinery , that was owned by the Russian company Lukoil. That licence only covers the negotiation, not the actual purchase, and it expires 27 June. Ludoil signed a deal on 18 May, but they cannot actually complete the purchase without a separate special permission from the US Treasury. If that permission doesn't arrive before 27 June, the deal could fall apart.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

GL 134C's expiry without a successor exposes the vessel-services gap through a specific mechanism: maritime insurance and P&I club cover for Russian-cargo vessels is written on English law contracts that require compliance with OFAC regulations.

When GL 134C lapses, London market P&I clubs , which cover roughly 90% of the world's ocean-going tonnage , lose their legal basis to maintain cover on vessels carrying Russian crude loaded before 17 April. The hull becomes uninsurable in the London market, not because the barrel is sanctioned, but because the club rules prohibit exposure to OFAC-non-compliant trade.

The ISAB divestiture timeline has a different root: GL 131F's FAQ 1224 requirements are commercially abnormal. Requiring the buyer to sever all Lukoil connections, park funds in a US blocked account, and obtain a separate transaction licence before any value flows means Ludoil Energy is taking full commercial risk on a 320kbd Sicilian refinery , a €2-3bn asset , without being able to close or fund the acquisition.

This is not a standard M&A structure; it is a Treasury-supervised fire sale with terms that make commercial financing extremely difficult.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    A GL 134C lapse without a GL 134D rollover on 17 June would trigger a Baltic Aframax compliance-bid spike on TD7 and TD19 freight rates, adding approximately $0.30-0.50/bbl to delivered Urals costs in NWE.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Risk

    GL 131F expires 27 June; without a specific OFAC transaction licence before that date, the Ludoil ISAB deal cannot close, leaving a 320kbd Sicilian refinery in regulatory limbo and complicating its crude supply planning into H2 2026.

    Short term · Suggested
  • Precedent

    A completed ISAB divestiture under FAQ 1224 terms would establish the first precedent for a OFAC-supervised Russian refinery sale in the EU, setting the template for any future Lukoil European asset wind-down.

    Medium term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #5 · Sixth straight draw, the flat price won't say

Cyprus Shipping News· 4 Jun 2026
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Different Perspectives
Kazakhstan (Tengiz / CPC pipeline operators)
Kazakhstan (Tengiz / CPC pipeline operators)
Kazakhstan's 322kbd Tengiz overage runs on the CPC pipeline, which bypasses the Gulf, making it structurally durable and effectively quota-exempt within the cartel. The Tengiz expansion reached plateau production in early 2026 and cannot be throttled without reservoir damage, setting a precedent for infrastructure-forced overproduction as an OPEC+ carve-out.
NWE sell-side macro desk
NWE sell-side macro desk
The divergence between sub-$97 Brent and a crack near $54 is the structural trade: long the crack against crude, with the June OFAC calendar as convexity on top. With the WTI unwind complete and Brent-WTI at $2 with no mechanical compressor, the Brent-WTI spread carries cheap optionality on the three June dates rather than a directional flat-price call.
Italian government / ISAB / Priolo Gargallo operators
Italian government / ISAB / Priolo Gargallo operators
Six GL rollovers without a completed ISAB sale leave the 320kbd Sicilian refinery under a sanctions-perimeter procurement overhang; the Italian Golden Power review has no confirmed timeline and can block the Ludoil deal independently of OFAC. Rome secured a 30-day EU derogation for ISAB in 2012 and is expected to seek one again if 27 June approaches.
Chinese state refiners (CNPC / Sinopec)
Chinese state refiners (CNPC / Sinopec)
Chinese seaborne crude imports ran at a decade-low 6.78mbd in May as refining margins stayed negative near -$2/bbl, with state refiners drawing on onshore strategic stocks rather than buying at $90-plus Brent. The demand hole, not a reopened Hormuz, compressed the Brent-Dubai EFS off its $6-plus peak; restart signal is margin recovery above $3-5/bbl.
EU Council sanctions directorate
EU Council sanctions directorate
Brussels adopted its 21st sanctions package on 26 May targeting shadow-fleet tanker listings and bank financing rather than revising the G7 price cap, a doctrine that routes pressure through freight and financing costs rather than cap arithmetic. The EU's approach compounds OFAC's tonnage drain without requiring G7 consensus on a new cap number.
US Treasury / OFAC
US Treasury / OFAC
OFAC has issued no GL 134D rollover as of 04 June, leaving a 13-day cliff on the Russian vessel-services umbrella while simultaneously running a negotiation-only clock on the ISAB divestiture to 27 June. The dual-deadline architecture, authorise-without-compelling on the Russian refinery track while closing Iranian buyer legs, is OFAC's deliberate June compliance design.