BRUSSELS, Nov 30 (Reuters) - EU countries are digging in against parts of the Commission's latest proposed package of sanctions on Russia, namely the so-called "no Russia clause", retaliatory financial limits and dual-use goods for personal use, six sources said.
The package, which would be the bloc's 12th since Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022, also seeks to close more loopholes on sanctions circumvention.
They justify the moves based on a sanctions list of items that could be used a "potential revenue" for Russia.
On the oil side, the EU and G7 are trying to tighten the trade of Russian oil under their $60 per barrel crude oil price cap.
Western countries said while it worked for a while, Russian oil revenues were rising thanks to growing "shadow fleet" of tankers made up of aging Western ships.
Persons:
Julia Payne, Alison Williams
Organizations:
Russia, EU Commission, EU, Thomson
Locations:
BRUSSELS, Russia, Ukraine, Brazil, EU, Russian