On 15 June 2026, the Council of the EU adopted a further set of restrictive measures in response to what it terms Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine, adding 34 individuals and 47 entities to the EU’s asset-freeze and travel-ban lists across three sanctions regimes, and renewing the measures responding to the annexation of Crimea and the city of Sevastopol. For the trade practitioner, the significance of the action lies less in its scale than in its composition: rather than amending the sectoral prohibitions, it widens the designation lists across four priority components, the military-industrial complex, the shadow-fleet ecosystem, hybrid activities and human rights violations, and it reaches enablers established well beyond Russia, most notably the ship-management and bunkering companies that keep the shadow fleet at sea. This alert examines the new listings component by component and draws out the cross-border reach and the screening obligations that, for most operators, are the salient features.

We recently published an update on the ruling. Read the full insight here.