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Iran Conflict 2026
9JUL

Seventh licence keeps ISAB Priolo open

3 min read
12:10UTC

Hours before GL 131F lapsed, OFAC issued GL 131G on 25 June, a seventh monthly extension that kept the 320,000 b/d ISAB Priolo refinery running while its sale to Ludoil stays frozen in paperwork.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

OFAC's seventh ISAB extension defers the Sicilian supply cliff to 25 July without resolving the stalled Lukoil sale.

The 320,000 b/d ISAB Priolo refinery in Sicily kept running past 28 June. Hours before General License (GL) 131F lapsed , the US Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) issued GL 131G on 25 June, a seventh straight monthly extension of the authorisation to negotiate the sale of Lukoil International GmbH (LIG) 1. The new licence runs to 25 July and covers negotiation only; closing the sale still needs a separate OFAC transaction licence that has never been issued, leaving one of Italy's larger refineries a single expiry away from stranding inside the sanctions perimeter because its owner is the sanctioned Russian major Lukoil.

Four approvals still stand between Ludoil Energy, the prospective buyer, and operational control. The OFAC transaction licence has not been issued. Italy granted only conditional Golden Power clearance on 4 June , not a final one. Antitrust and broader regulatory sign-offs remain pending . Ludoil, which signed the purchase earlier this year , can negotiate, not operate or close, and Lukoil still owns the asset.

Clearing a cross-border refinery sale with parties on OFAC's Specially Designated Nationals (SDN) list and four open regulatory tracks inside 27 days does not happen. The realistic base case is GL 131H in late July, which makes the monthly extension the policy rather than a route to closure. For a Mediterranean product desk, that removes the supply cliff this month but leaves 320,000 b/d of Sicilian capacity that clears, or does not, on OFAC's calendar.

The enforcement escalation some desks priced after the clean GL 134C lapse went the other way. OFAC spent the window extending licences, not designating; the forward Russian-enforcement premium that a protection-and-indemnity (P&I) club or shadow-fleet listing would have triggered did not ratchet higher .

Deep Analysis

In plain English

OFAC is the US Treasury office that administers America's economic sanctions. Lukoil, a Russian oil company, owns the ISAB Priolo refinery in Sicily, Italy. Because Lukoil sits on America's sanctions blacklist (the SDN list), nobody can buy or operate its assets without OFAC permission. OFAC has been issuing monthly general licences that allow sale negotiations to continue, but not the actual sale itself. GL 131G is the seventh such licence in a row, running only to 25 July. Before the prospective buyer, Ludoil Energy, can take over, four separate approvals must clear: an OFAC transaction licence to close the deal (never yet issued), Italy's final Golden Power sign-off under its foreign-investment screening law, antitrust clearance, and other regulatory approvals. With 27 days on the clock and all four gates still open, a further monthly extension is the most likely outcome.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Two OFAC licence gates run in parallel and require sequential clearance. The negotiation gate (GL 131G) authorises Ludoil Energy to negotiate and sign contingent contracts.

The transaction gate, a separate specific OFAC licence, has never been issued and must clear before any title transfer can occur; GL 131G explicitly states this condition. Italy's conditional Golden Power clearance on 4 June 2026 added a third parallel gate, and antitrust review a fourth.

OFAC controls the rate-limiting first gate, giving the agency effective leverage over the entire timeline regardless of how quickly Italy and the competition authorities complete their own processes.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    ISAB Priolo continues operating under Lukoil management for at least another month, delaying transfer of 320,000 b/d of Sicilian crude-processing capacity to a non-sanctioned operator.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Risk

    If OFAC declines to issue a transaction licence before 25 July and withholds GL 131H, the refinery faces legal stranding inside the sanctions perimeter with no ownership or operational resolution.

    Short term · Reported
  • Precedent

    Seven consecutive negotiation-only extensions without a transaction licence establish serial extension as a visible OFAC policy instrument for managing sanctioned energy assets, consistent with the CITGO-PDVSA managed-stasis model.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Meaning

    Ludoil Energy's inability to close despite signing a purchase agreement demonstrates that OFAC's two-track licence structure, separating negotiation and transaction gates, can hold a deal in indefinite suspension without formally blocking it.

    Medium term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #12 · ISAB Priolo dodges the cliff

US Treasury OFAC· 30 Jun 2026
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