Danfoss -- the Danish company fined more than $4.3 million last month for violating U.S. sanctions against Iran, Syria and Sudan (see 2212300030) -- stressed it didn't sell items subject to sanctions or export controls and has taken steps to improve its compliance program. In a Dec. 30 statement, it also said "no evidence was found that Danfoss willfully accepted payments for the purpose of potentially evading sanctions." The company noted that the Office of Foreign Assets Control said Danfoss "took quick action to ascertain the root causes of the conduct at issue, cooperated fully with OFAC, and also adopted new and more effective internal controls and procedures to prevent a recurrence of the apparent violations." The company added its last shipment to Iran "took place in January 2019."
The Office of Foreign Assets Control last week issued preliminary guidance on the implementation of the price cap for Russian-origin petroleum products, outlining how it will apply restrictions to articles defined by Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the U.S. heading 2710. The price cap will work in a similar manner to the crude oil cap, where participating countries will ban "a broad range" of maritime transport services if they support shipping Russian petroleum products over a predetermined cap.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control last week fined a multinational Danish-based refrigeration manufacturer more than $4.3 million for violating U.S. sanctions against Iran, Syria and Sudan. Danfoss, which also sells air conditioners and other cooling and heating products, illegally directed customers in all three countries to make payments through a U.S. financial institution, OFAC said in an enforcement notice. The company also made illegal payments to entities in Iran and Syria.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control is seeking public comments on an information collection involving remittance forwarding services related to Cuba. OFAC imposes recordkeeping requirements, restrictions and other conditions on those services under the Cuban Assets Control Regulations. Comments are due Jan. 30.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control this week deleted five Iraqi-related entries on its Specially Designated Nationals List. The entries were added to the list in 2004 for operating as part of a network of front companies procuring weapons for the Iraqi Intelligence Service and doing business to support the fallen Saddam Hussein regime. OFAC didn’t release more information.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control published two Russia-related general licenses in the Federal Register this week. The previously issued licenses, 8D and 40C, authorize certain transactions related to Russian energy and civil aviation safety.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control this week updated two entries and deleted three entries from its Specially Designated Nationals List. Both the updated entries are linked to the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, and the deleted entries include a Venezuelan aircraft and two people with Nicaraguan addresses. OFAC didn't provide more information.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control added an Iranian prosecutor general, key military and paramilitary officials, and one entity to its Specially Designated Nationals List related to ongoing violence against protesters. Iranian security forces have continued to escalate violence, including the execution of two protesters and multiple death sentences, OFAC said in a Dec. 21 press release. The designations target the "senior official overseeing the prosecution of protestors," the leaders of organizations assaulting and detaining protestors and the company that provides security forces with anti-riot equipment.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control this week issued a new frequently asked question addressing the service provision price cap on Russian oil. New FAQ 1109 explains that petroleum products loaded prior to Feb. 5 and unloaded prior to April 1 are not subject to the price cap. The FAQ also provides an example of a permissible transaction: A U.S. commodities trader signs a contract on Jan. 1 to purchase Russian petroleum products for shipment to a jurisdiction that has not prohibited the import of those products. The trader arranges for the petroleum products to be loaded onto a vessel, which is loaded on Feb. 1 and a bill of lading is issued. The products are then shipped and discharged at the port of destination on Feb. 15. "U.S. insurance companies provide cover for this shipment/voyage and pay out any related claims, as appropriate," OFAC said.
The Office of Foreign Assets Control this week announced what it said are "historic steps" to implement new humantiarian-related authrotizations across its sanctions programs in an effort to better allow the flow of aid to sanctioned countries. The move builds on a U.N. Security Council decision earlier this month that established a humanitarian carve-out across sanctions regimes, allowing nongovernmental organizations, banks and others a general license for certain aid-related transactions involving sanctioned jurisdictions (see 2212120054). Treasury said the U.S. is "the first country in the world" to implement the U.N. carveout in its own borders.