Sanctions
How sanctions affect the economy: source-linked static indicators for energy trade, price caps, fiscal revenue, the Russian oil shadow fleet, and trade rerouting. An economic-impact reference, not legal or compliance advice.
Sanctions dashboard
One source-linked summary of every sanctions indicator, the price-cap policy thresholds, and review status across all topics below.
Topics
Economic impact of sanctions on Russian energy trade
Crude price cap (policy threshold, not a market price): US$60/bbl for the U.S./G7 coalition (U.S. Treasury) and a lower dynamic EU cap of US$44.10/bbl (from 1 February 2026) — the thresholds differ by jurisdiction.
Economic impact of Russia's oil shadow fleet and shipping sanctions
Enforcement: the EU has listed 632 shadow-fleet vessels (20th package, Apr 2026) and the U.S. Treasury designated 183 vessels (Jan 2025) — source-linked counts as of those actions.
Economic impact of frozen Russian assets and Ukraine financing
Principal: around €210 billion of Central Bank of Russia assets are immobilized in the EU (of about €260 billion worldwide) — immobilized, not confiscated.
Economic impact of secondary sanctions and third-country circumvention
Enforcement: the EU 20th package (Apr 2026) listed 60 military-industrial / circumvention entities, 28 in third countries (live/source-linked).
Related references
- Methodology — confidence levels, data modes, and language policy.
- Source registry — every public source, with per-source detail pages.
- Data coverage — the live/sample split sitewide and per page.
- Data review queue — review priorities and recommended-review-by dates.