US extends Lukoil asset sale deadline to April amid Russia sanctions pressure
2026-02-26 - 23:12
The US Treasury Department announced Thursday it has extended the deadline for Russian energy giant Lukoil to divest foreign assets until April 1, issuing a new general license that supersedes a previous extension set to expire at the end of February. The move allows additional time for the sanctioned company to wind down its international operations while maintaining financial pressure on Moscow. License Terms and Restrictions The Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control issued a license authorizing transactions "ordinarily incident and necessary to the negotiation of and entry into contracts for the sale, disposition, or transfer of Lukoil International GmbH" and its affiliated entities through early April. The license also permits transactions related to the maintenance and wind-down of Lukoil's international operations during the same period. However, it explicitly prohibits "the transfer of funds to any person or account located in the Russian Federation," ensuring that proceeds from asset sales cannot flow back to Russia. Any contracts entered into remain contingent on receiving separate Treasury Department authorization before execution. Sanctions Context Lukoil, Russia's second-largest oil producer, was sanctioned by Washington in October at President Donald Trump's direction as part of broader efforts to squeeze Russia's energy revenues and reduce financial resources available for Moscow's military operations. The company represents a key target in Western pressure campaigns aimed at crippling Russia's ability to fund its war effort while carefully managing global energy market impacts. Balancing Pressure and Market Stability The US frequently updates its sanctions licenses to calibrate economic pressure on the Kremlin while minimizing disruption to global energy markets. The extension reflects the complexity of unwinding Lukoil's international footprint and the Biden—now Trump—administration's careful approach to enforcing sanctions against major Russian energy firms without triggering sudden price spikes or supply shortages that could harm Western economies.