As Russian drone hits kill 3 more in Ukraine, EU seeks to cut oil profits
National Herald June 11, 2025 03:39 AM

The European Union wants to lower a cap on the price of Russian oil to deprive the Kremlin of extra profits to fund its war in Ukraine as part of a new raft of sanctions aimed at forcing Moscow to the negotiating table, senior officials said on Tuesday. All 27 EU member countries must all agree for the sanctions to enter force.

EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said the bloc is “proposing to lower the oil price cap from USD 60 to USD 45, which is lower than the market price, and lowering the oil price cap will hit Russia's revenues hard”.

Kallas said the EU also wants to impose “sanctions on the Nord Stream pipelines to prevent Russia generating any revenue in the future. In this way, it sends a clear signal we are not going back to business as usual”.

Earlier on Tuesday, it was reported that Russia attacked two Ukrainian cities with waves of drones and missiles, killing three people and wounding at least 13 in what Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy called “one of the biggest” strikes in the three-year-old war.

The attack struck Kyiv and the southern port city of Odesa. In an online statement, Zelenskyy said Moscow's forces fired over 315 drones, most of them Shaheds, and seven missiles overnight. “Russian missile and Shahed strikes are louder than the efforts of the United States and others around the world to force Russia into peace,” Zelenskyy wrote, urging “concrete action” from the US and Europe in response to the attack.

A maternity hospital and residential buildings in the southern port of Odesa were damaged in the attack, regional head Oleh Kiper said. Two people were killed and nine injured, according to the regional prosecutor's office. Another person was killed in Kyiv's Obolonskyi district, regional head Tymur Tkachenko wrote on Telegram.

“Russian strikes are once again hitting not military targets but the lives of ordinary people. This once again shows the true nature of what we are dealing with,” he said. Explosions and the buzzing of drones were heard around the city for hours.

The fresh attacks came a day after Moscow launched almost 500 drones at Ukraine in the biggest overnight drone bombardment of the war. Ukrainian and Western officials have been anticipating Moscow's response to Kyiv's audacious 1 June drone attack on distant Russian air bases.

Russia has been launching a record number of drones and missiles in recent days, despite both sides trading memoranda at direct peace talks in Istanbul on 2 June that set out conditions for a potential ceasefire.

In 2023, Ukraine's Western allies limited sales of Russian oil to USD 60 per barrel but the price cap was largely symbolic as most of Moscow's crude — its main moneymaker — cost less than that. Still, the cap was there in case oil prices rose.

Oil income is the linchpin of Russia's economy, allowing President Vladimir Putin to pour money into the armed forces while avoiding worsening inflation for everyday people and a currency collapse.

European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen said she assumed that the price cap would be discussed and agreed among the leaders of the Group of Seven major world economic powers when they meet in Canada on 15-17 June.

She said the United States and its G7 partners realise “that the oil price has lowered so much that the effectiveness of the cap is to be questioned, and therefore we all want to lower the oil price from USD 60 per barrel down to USD 45 per barrel”.

The Nord Stream gas pipelines were built to carry Russian natural gas to Germany but are not in operation. They were sabotaged in 2022, but the source of the underwater explosions has remained a major international mystery.

The Commission has said that it wants to impose sanctions on the operating consortium to discourage investors from trying to use the pipelines in future.

The blasts happened as Europe attempted to wean itself off Russian energy sources following the Kremlin's full-scale invasion of Ukraine, and contributed to tensions that followed the start of the war.

Von der Leyen noted on Tuesday that at the beginning of the war in 2022, “Russia had 12 billion euros (USD 14 billion) of energy revenues from fossil fuels" from Europe per month. "And now we're down to 1.8 billion (euros).”

The new EU sanctions would also target Russia's banking sector, with the aim of limiting the Kremlin's ability to raise funds or carry out financial transactions. A further 22 Russian banks will be hit with measures, von der Leyen said.

An export ban worth some 2.5 billion euros would also be imposed, and the assets frozen of more than 20 Russian and foreign companies alleged to be providing support to the Kremlin's war machine.

Von der Leyen said the sanctions are aimed at forcing Russia into serious talks about peace with Ukraine. “We need a real ceasefire, and Russia has to come to the negotiating table with a serious proposal,” she told reporters.

The EU has imposed several rounds of sanctions on Russia since Putin ordered his troops into Ukraine in February 2022. Around 2,400 officials and “entities” — often government agencies, banks and organisations — have been hit.

It's last raft of sanctions, imposed on 20 May, targeted almost 200 ships in Russia's sanction-busting shadow fleet of tankers, and tightened trade restrictions to stop produce that could be used for military purposes from reaching Russia's armed forces.

Edited AP/PTI copy

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