Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
Iran Conflict 2026
17MAR

GL-U lapses Saturday with no renewal

4 min read
04:31UTC

OFAC General License U, the Treasury instrument authorising Iranian-origin crude already at sea, expires at 12:01am EDT on Saturday 19 April with no published renewal text.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Treasury has had 27 days to publish a renewal and has not; 325 tankers lose cover Saturday.

OFAC General License U expires at 12:01am EDT on Saturday 19 April with no published renewal, no replacement, no bridging text. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent confirmed non-renewal on 15 April , and OFAC has now been silent on Iran for 27 days of calendar runway. The instrument authorises sale of Iranian-origin crude loaded on or before 20 March. Approximately 325 tankers carrying around $31.5 billion of cargo are mid-voyage into a window closing beneath them.

What happens next is not dramatic at the level of explosions; it is dramatic at the level of insurance. Protection and indemnity clubs price cargo on the basis of documented sanctions coverage. A lapsed general licence turns a compliant voyage into a sanctions exposure on arrival. Buyers in South Korea, India and Europe lose the paperwork trail that made them willing to unload the barrels in the first place. Chinese refiners operating on sanctions tolerance already price that exposure into their transactions; others do not.

The timing collision matters more than the underlying policy shift. GL-U lapses three days before the 22 April Iran ceasefire expiry, six days before the Lebanon truce ends and ten days before the WPR 60-day clock runs out. Each of those deadlines carries its own unsigned character, but GL-U is the one with mechanical finality. The clock does not negotiate.

Defenders of the non-renewal will argue it ratchets economic pressure on Tehran. Opponents will note that the pressure lands on third-country buyers and crews in international waters, not on the Iranian state, and that a non-renewal without a published replacement creates precisely the kind of compliance vacuum sanctions architects usually avoid. A sanctions regime produces leverage when counterparties can read it. A regime that runs out without paper produces something closer to a trade disruption with no declared author. Treasury has had 27 days to choose otherwise.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Since March, a US Treasury licence called General Licence U had given legal cover to ships carrying Iranian oil that was already at sea. Without it, those ships and their buyers are exposed to US sanctions , financial penalties that can cut them off from the global banking system. On 19 April the licence expires with no extension. About 325 tankers carrying oil worth roughly $31 billion lose that cover simultaneously. That is an unusual legal situation: normally the US phases out these licences gradually to avoid market chaos. This time there is no phase-out.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

GL-U's expiry without renewal is the direct financial instrument of what Bessent called 'the financial equivalent of the bombing campaign' , a deliberately coordinated economic pressure track running parallel to CENTCOM operations. The root mechanism is the first-ever OFAC authorisation of Iranian-origin crude transactions, which created a legal window that Bessent is now closing to maximise leverage before the 22 April ceasefire expiry.

The 325-tanker exposure traces to the gap between GL-U's issuance on 20 March , covering cargo loaded before that date , and the 16 April ceasefire announcement. Tankers loaded in the expectation of the licence remaining valid are now legally stranded without any transition mechanism. The simultaneous ceasefire announcement three days before the licence expiry compresses the negotiating timeline to a point where Iran cannot accept terms and operationally comply before the sanctions snap back.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    325 tankers carrying $31.5 billion of cargo become simultaneously exposed to US primary and secondary sanctions with no transition mechanism, a legally unprecedented cargo-stranding event.

    Immediate · High
  • Risk

    P&I insurers revoking cover for GL-U-expired cargo will force Iranian crude onto non-Western insurance, accelerating the bifurcation of global maritime insurance markets begun with Russia in 2022.

    Medium term · Medium
  • Opportunity

    Chinese teapot refiners and Indian state buyers may absorb stranded cargo at steep discount, partially offsetting the supply shock but locking in long-term Iranian crude dependency outside US financial system reach.

    Short term · Medium
First Reported In

Update #71 · Netanyahu learned from the media

US Department of the Treasury (OFAC)· 17 Apr 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
IAEA
IAEA
Director General Rafael Grossi appeared in person at the UNSC on 19 May and warned that a direct hit on an operating reactor 'could result in very high release of radioactivity'. The session produced a condemnation record but no resolution, and the Barakah perimeter was already struck on 17 May.
Hengaw (Kurdish rights monitor)
Hengaw (Kurdish rights monitor)
Hengaw documented three judicial executions and the detention of Kurdish writer Majid Karimi in Tehran on 19 May, establishing Khorasan Razavi province as the newest geography in Iran's wartime judicial record. The organisation's Norway-based operation continues to surface a domestic repression track running in parallel with every diplomatic and military development.
India
India
Six India-flagged vessels conducted a coordinated cluster transit under PGSA bilateral assurances during the 17 May window, paying no yuan tolls. New Delhi's inclusion in Iran's state-to-state passage track insulates Indian energy supply without requiring endorsement of the PGSA's yuan-toll architecture or alignment with the US coalition.
Pakistan
Pakistan
Pakistan is the only functioning diplomatic bridge between Tehran and Washington. Its role is relay, not mediation in the settlement sense: it conveyed Iran's 10-point counter-MOU in early May, relayed the US rejection, and is now passing 'corrective points' in the third documented exchange of this sub-cycle without either side working from a shared text.
UK and France (Northwood coalition)
UK and France (Northwood coalition)
Twenty-six coalition members have published no rules of engagement eight days after the Bahrain joint statement; Lloyd's underwriters have conditioned war-risk reopening on written ROE from either Iran or the coalition. Italian and French mine-countermeasures deployments are operating on the in-water clearance task CENTCOM Admiral Brad Cooper's 90% mine-stockpile claim does not address.
Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia
Riyadh has not publicly commented on the Barakah strike or the 50-47 discharge vote. Saudi output feeds the IEA's $106 base case; the $5 Brent premium above that model reflects institutional uncertainty no Gulf producer can compress through supply adjustment alone.