Skip to content
You can now search across every topic, entity and event.What's new
Iran Conflict 2026
9JUL

OFAC rolls the gas, not the crude

4 min read
12:10UTC

OFAC issued Russia General License 55F on Thursday 11 June, extending Sakhalin-2 LNG services for Japan. The licence it chose to roll, and the crude bridge it did not, signals which Russia tracks Washington will keep open.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

OFAC extended a Russian gas licence for Japan while declining to roll the crude cover lapsing days later.

OFAC, the US Treasury's sanctions bureau, issued Russia General License 55F on Thursday 11 June, extending the services authorisation for Sakhalin-2, the Russian liquefied natural gas project in the Far East where Japan is a primary off-take customer 1. The licence runs on the Russia programme but a separate track from the GL 134 series that covers Russian-crude vessel services, and it is not a bridge or rollover for the crude cover that lapses days later.

The signal sits in what OFAC rolled versus what it left. Treasury extended a gas licence for an allied buyer at the same moment Rubio had set the crude waivers on a path to end . Each Russia track now carries its own calendar and its own political weight: Sakhalin-2 LNG stays inside the perimeter because Japan needs the molecules, while the seaborne-crude cover is allowed to run to its edge. The contrast turns the crude lapse into a deliberate choice rather than a paperwork stumble, which is what the desk needs when it prices the marginal Russian barrel into Mediterranean refining margins.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Sakhalin-2 is a large natural gas project on an island off Russia's east coast, called Sakhalin. Japan buys a big share of the gas it produces, because Japan has almost no domestic energy sources and relies heavily on imports. After Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the US applied broad sanctions on Russian energy, but it repeatedly made an exception for Sakhalin-2, because cutting off Japan's supply abruptly would cause serious problems: power cuts and economic disruption in one of the world's largest economies. The latest version of that exception, called General License 55F, was issued on 11 June 2026. What made this notable is what it was not: a replacement for the expiring waiver covering Russian crude oil shipments (called GL 134C), which expires on 17 June. Some market participants wondered if the Sakhalin-2 renewal was a signal that the crude-oil waiver would also be extended. It was not. The two licences cover completely different products and different sets of companies. The US extended the gas exception for Japan but appears to be letting the oil-shipping exception expire on schedule.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Japan's structural energy dependency on Sakhalin-2 traces to the 2011 Fukushima disaster. The nuclear shutdown that followed eliminated roughly 30% of Japan's baseload electricity capacity overnight, forcing a pivot to LNG-fired gas-turbine generation.

Japan signed long-term Sakhalin-2 off-take contracts through its major utilities (JERA, Tokyo Gas, Osaka Gas) on 20-year tenors in the 2013-2015 window, precisely because post-Fukushima demand made them price-takers. By 2026, those contracts still represent roughly 8-9% of Japan's total LNG import volume, with no alternative supply at equivalent delivered cost available on the timeline a hard lapse would require.

The legal distinction between GL 55 (Sakhalin-2 services) and GL 134 (Russian crude vessel services) runs through the definition of the sanctioned activity. GL 134's bite rests on covering vessel insurance, brokerage, and port services on crude shipments: a broad and commercially critical set of services.

Sakhalin-2's GL 55 carve-out covers equity-participation services and LNG cargo services for a specific project, a narrower authorisation that OFAC can defend as project-specific rather than commodity-class. The UK's Starmer government used an analogous narrow framing in May 2026 when it eased sanctions to permit third-country-refined Russian crude imports, a pattern of narrow product-specific exemptions that protect a specific supply node without conceding the broader principle.

The absence of GL 134D is therefore not contradicted by GL 55F: one is a programme-specific renewal in a track that has never faced wind-down pressure; the other is the end-stage of a tightening series where the political signal (Rubio, ) and the structural logic both point to lapse.

What could happen next?
  • Precedent

    GL 55F's renewal alongside GL 134C's lapse confirms OFAC's multi-track enforcement architecture: programme-specific carve-outs for energy-security dependencies survive while commodity-class waivers tighten. Any G7 partner with a documented alternative-supply gap can in principle negotiate a GL 55-style exemption, weakening the uniform-pressure intent of the broader Russia sanctions regime.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Consequence

    Japan retains Sakhalin-2 access under GL 55F but gains no crude-service cover from it. Japanese refiners importing Russian crude on shadow-fleet vessels remain outside the GL 134C umbrella and face the same enforcement exposure as any other buyer after 17 June.

    Immediate · Reported
  • Risk

    Sinopec Research Institute's coalition-asymmetry reading, if adopted by Chinese policymakers, could reduce Beijing's cooperation on Iran nuclear talks (where China holds material leverage), if Beijing concludes the G7 applies maximum pressure on China-adjacent trade flows (crude) while protecting Japan-adjacent ones (LNG).

    Medium term · Suggested
First Reported In

Update #8 · Longs rebuilt into an 8-week Brent low

OFAC· 15 Jun 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
Oil market and P&I insurers
Oil market and P&I insurers
Brent cleared $87 intraday only once CENTCOM's blockade became physical rather than declared, even though P&I Clubs had already excluded Hormuz war risk a week earlier on 7 July: capital hedged ahead of enforcement, but prices moved only after it.
UAE reporting
UAE reporting
UAE reporting placed the Omani tanker deaths at one seafarer against the International Maritime Agency's count of two, the first time in this war that a Gulf state's casualty figures have diverged from an international monitor's.
Jordan
Jordan
Iranian strikes reached Jordan again on 14 July as part of the Gulf-wide retaliation for the Hormuz blockade, extending the conflict's geographic footprint to a state with no direct stake in the strait itself.
Bahrain
Bahrain
Bahrain sounded air-raid sirens on 14 July during Iran's Gulf-wide retaliation, the same day CENTCOM's blockade order and fourth night of strikes pushed the conflict's physical reach into the wider Gulf littoral.
Kuwait
Kuwait
Kuwait intercepted Iranian missiles and drones on 14 July as Tehran's blockade retaliation reached Gulf states beyond Iran's immediate shoreline, confirming Kuwaiti airspace now sits inside Iran's retaliatory envelope.
Oman
Oman
Oman absorbed the war's first tanker casualties in its own waters on 14 July, with two supertankers disabled and seafarers killed, putting the sultanate's shipping lanes directly in the path of the blockade fight for the first time.