The U.K. this week unveiled a new agency that it said will boost enforcement of its Russia sanctions and "clamp down on companies dodging" those restrictions, the Department for Business and Trade announced. The new Office of Trade Sanctions Implementation also will help the government issue "tougher penalties" for trade sanctions violations and refer cases for criminal enforcement.
The European Commission last week proposed to extend the current rules of origin for electric vehicles and battery trade with the U.K., delaying the imposition of new tariffs on U.K. electric vehicles until Dec. 31, 2026. The rules were scheduled to take effect Jan. 1.
The European Council on Dec. 8 added two Hamas military leaders to the EU terrorist list. Mohammed Deif, commander general of Hamas' military wing, and Marwan Issa, the deputy commander, are now subject to an asset freeze.
The U.K. this week designated 25 people and 20 entities under its Russia sanctions regime. The listings included a mix of businesses based in Russia, China, the United Arab Emirates, Turkey, Serbia and Uzbekistan, covering industries in the energy, shipping and defense sectors. Among those sanctioned was Russian firm Aeroscan, which was designated for supplying drones to the Russian military, along with Dubai-based shipping companies Radiating World Shipping Services and Star Voyages Shipping services, which do business in a Russian "sector of strategic significance."
A former EU director general for the bloc's climate action directorate defended its Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism, saying it's not designed to protect European heavy industry against imports from lower-cost economies.
African and Brazilian participants at the U.N. Climate Change Conference complained that the EU's due diligence requirement to certify that commodities were not grown on deforested land in the tropics (see 2112030047 and 2307270041) is burdensome to small farmers in their countries.
The U.K. government this week issued new guidance to alert the country’s financial services industry about ways Russia is using third countries to evade export controls and sanctions. The “red alert” also includes a list of red flags that banks, credit card operators, foreign exchange dealers and other payment service providers should monitor for potential Russian sanctions evasion, and the country’s National Crime Agency urged financial institutions to submit reports about any suspicious activity.
A "substantial volume" of apparel made with Uyghur forced labor is entering the EU without restriction, a new Sheffield Hallam University report said. The report, released Dec. 6, studied four Chinese suppliers and focused on how their products were getting into the EU. In all, 39 brands are "at high risk" for sourcing goods made with Uyghur forced labor, including Hugo Boss, Inditex and Skechers.
The European Council on Dec. 4 adopted decisions for two trade agreements with Chile, which together would create an updated version of the EU-Chile Association Agreement currently in force. The new agreements -- which the bloc is calling an advanced framework agreement and an interim trade agreement -- contain political, trade and investment components and trade and investment liberalization, respectively.
The European Council on Dec. 4 extended by three years, until Dec. 8, 2026, its EU Global Human Rights Sanctions Regime pertaining to individuals and entities responsible for perpetrating human rights abuses around the world, the council announced. The sanctions cover 67 people and 20 entities and include a travel ban and asset freeze. The council said that "[e]xisting restrictive measures (sanctions) will continue to be reviewed annually."