The European Union (EU) Council adopted conclusions on Ukraine on 18 June, opening the accession Intergovernmental Conference (the formal membership-negotiation track, the IGC), calling for a 21st sanctions package, and confirming the first disbursement of the €90 billion loan 1. The IGC is the body through which a candidate state negotiates the legal terms of joining; opening it moves Ukraine from applicant to active negotiator.
The conclusions called for a "whole of route" approach to Russia's shadow fleet, the ageing tankers Moscow uses to move crude outside Western insurance and inspection, and that phrasing is where the structural bite sits. Targeting the route rather than individual vessels aims at the chartering, port-call and insurance links the fleet depends on, the chokepoints that are harder to re-flag around than any single ship. That is a different instrument from a price cap, and a harder one to dodge.
The timing is the answer to Moscow's mediation offer . On the day Russia proposed the EU as a referee, the EU was changing the scoreboard: more sanctions, an open accession track, and the long-delayed first loan tranche finally cleared to disburse . Brussels is not picking up the whistle Russia handed it.
