The EU ambassadors will meet today to decide what steps to take after allegations of Russian war crimes in Ukraine. According to Ursula von der Leyen, the EU’s planned measures include:
- A ban on coal imports worth €4bn a year and a full ban on four Russian banks, including Russia's second-biggest bank VTB
- A ban on Russian ships entering EU ports (with some exemptions) and on Russian and Belarusian road transport operators
- Bans on EU exports in advanced semiconductors and machinery worth €10bn and other EU imports on wood, cement, seafood, and alcohol.
- Russian companies would also be barred from competing for contracts across the EU.
This is the fifth set of EU sanctions so far. The member states are planning on cutting the use of Russian gas by 2/3 by the end of 2022. They want to make Europe fully independent of Russian fossil fuels by 2023.
EU’s most recent proposals tighten sanctions on four Russian banks. Even though major Russian banks have been shut out of the Swift financial messaging system, Sberbank and Gazprombank are not, as they facilitate energy payment from Europe to Russia.
On the other side of the Atlantic, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki stated that the measures would target Russian financial and state-owned bodies and some officials and oligarchs. The move will "hold accountable the Russian kleptocracy that funds and supports Putin's war.” The sanctions will include a ban on all new investments in Russia. She added that the sanctions would be announced in coordination with the EU and other G7 nations.
Sources: bbc.com, reuters.com