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7MAY

GL X prices relief Europe cannot buy

3 min read
10:13UTC

OFAC's General License X reopened Iranian crude for Asian buyers on 22 June and sent Brent toward a three-month low near $73, but EU and UK sanctions bar European refiners from lifting a single barrel of it.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

US sanctions relief Europe cannot legally use widens the gap between flat Brent and European product cracks.

OFAC issued Iran-related General License X (GL X) on Monday 22 June, authorising the production, sale, delivery and shipping of Iranian crude with dollar payments through 21 August 1. Crude desks read it as a global supply event and sold Brent toward a three-month low near $73, extending the slide from $78.96 a week earlier . European refiners cannot lift a single barrel of it.

EU Regulation 833/2014, the sanctions framework that bars European firms from buying Iranian crude, is not overridden by a US general licence, and UK sanctions hold the same line 2. Asian and Indian refiners can take the freed barrels; European firms cannot. ARA and Mediterranean desks face the same distillate shortage they carried last week , now at a lower flat price.

The barrels GL X frees are lawful for an Indian buyer and unlawful for an Italian one. Flat Brent cannot tell the two apart and prices the global barrel down; the ICE Gasoil crack prices the barrel Europe is actually allowed to run, which has not loosened. A desk holding the gasoil crack against flat Brent is positioned for that split to widen.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Oil sanctions work through two legally separate systems that are not coordinated with each other. The US system is run by OFAC, part of the US Treasury, and binds on US companies and anyone using the US dollar clearing system. The European system is run under EU law and binds on European companies and banks, regardless of what the US allows. On 22 June, OFAC issued General License X allowing Iranian crude to be bought, sold, and shipped. This was part of the ongoing US-Iran diplomatic process (ID:4450). Asian refineries in China, India, and South Korea, which are not subject to EU law, can now legally purchase Iranian crude at a significant discount to market prices. However, European refineries in the Netherlands, Germany, Italy, and France are still banned from buying Iranian crude under EU Regulation 833/2014 and UK sanctions. These European rules apply regardless of what the US allows. So when Brent crude fell to $73, that price move was the market pricing in more supply from Iran. But European refiners cannot buy any of it. For them, diesel and heating oil remain exactly as scarce as they were before GL X was issued. The ICE Gasoil future, the European diesel benchmark, stayed elevated relative to the lower Brent price precisely because European buyers are excluded from the supply relief.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

EU Regulation 833/2014 (adopted 31 July 2014, extended by Council Regulation 2022/1271 and successive packages through 2025) prohibits EU persons from purchasing, importing, transporting, or providing services related to crude oil or petroleum products of Iranian origin.

Article 3aa as amended in 2022 explicitly includes crude oil from Iran alongside Russia's crude; the regulation does not provide a carve-in mechanism for US general licences, and Article 8 provides for member-state criminal penalties for violations. Any European refiner, trader, or bank providing trade finance for an Iranian cargo faces potential asset freezes and criminal referral to national competent authorities.

UK sanctions under the Russia (Sanctions)(EU Exit) Regulations 2019 and the Iran (Sanctions) Regulations 2023, as amended, separately reproduce this prohibition for UK persons in equivalent terms. The structural result of this legal architecture is a market where the same Iranian barrel is simultaneously authorised for Asian buyers transacting through OFAC-jurisdictional channels and prohibited for European buyers regardless of the price differential.

The ICE Gasoil crack against flat Brent will structurally widen as long as this asymmetry persists: European product buyers face the same distillate shortage as before GL X, at a lower flat-price level that has priced in supply they cannot legally access .

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    The legal access asymmetry between Asian and European buyers for GL X Iranian crude will widen the Brent-Dubai EFS (Exchange of Futures for Swaps) as Iranian barrels price competitively against Gulf crude for Asian buyers but provide no equivalent relief for NWE or Med refiners buying Brent-priced feedstock.

  • Risk

    If the Islamabad framework collapses before 21 August and GL X is revoked, Brent would recover sharply; European refiners would face the same physical shortage at a higher flat price, with no period of relief in between.

First Reported In

Update #11 · Crude longs flushed flat into a loaded week

OFAC· 26 Jun 2026
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