Topic

Sanctions & their economic impact

How sanctions on Russian energy trade, the shadow fleet, and frozen assets are tracked at Warconomy — an economic-impact reference, not legal advice.

Sanctions are policy tools that restrict trade, finance, or assets to change a target's behaviour. Warconomy tracks their economic-impact signals — price caps, energy-revenue estimates, listed-vessel counts, and immobilized assets — always as an economic reference, never as legal or compliance advice.

  • Energy and financial sanctions are among the largest economic levers in the Russia–Ukraine war, shaping fiscal revenue, shipping, and the flow of frozen funds toward reconstruction.
  • Every figure lives on its own source-linked page — this guide adds no new numbers.
  • Careful, associative language: not investment advice, not legal advice, not real-time.

Why this matters

Energy and financial sanctions are among the largest economic levers in the Russia–Ukraine war, shaping fiscal revenue, shipping, and the flow of frozen funds toward reconstruction.

What the data shows

  • Russia energy-trade sanctions: price-cap thresholds and energy-revenue indicators, each source-linked.
  • The shadow fleet and shipping-insurance sanctions, including cumulative listed-vessel counts from official releases.
  • Frozen Russian assets and Ukraine-financing indicators.

Warconomy pages on this topic

What this cannot prove

  • This is an economic-impact reference, not legal or compliance advice, and not a complete sanctions list.
  • Policy thresholds are not market prices; jurisdiction and scope differ.
  • Counts reflect official designations, not vessels actually halted.

Sources & data

Browse the cited sources, download the dataset export, or read the methodology. New to Warconomy? How to use Warconomy.

Related Warconomy pages