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Sources: US slows Lukoil assets sale due to Ukraine peace negotiations

Four sources with knowledge of the talks say that the United States has slowed down the sale of the international assets owned by the Russian oil giant Lukoil to use as a bargaining tool in the Ukraine peace talks.

A document reviewed by OFAC showed that the U.S. Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) will extend to Thursday the deadline for transactions to be completed from February 28 to April 1.

In recent weeks, U.S. and Russian government officials failed to make a breakthrough during talks in Geneva and Abu Dhabi, or in Miami, in order to negotiate a deal for peace in Ukraine. Three?sources briefed about the meetings said that the U.S. sanctioned Russia's largest oil producer, the state-run Rosneft as well as the second-largest, Lukoil.

The next round between the U.S. and Russia, as well as Ukraine, is scheduled for March.

OFAC has extended the deadline three times since Washington imposed sanctions against the two Russian oil firms in October.

An official in the U.S. A?U.S.

The official stated that any deal must require that Lukoil does not receive any upfront value, and that the sale proceeds are placed into a blocked account under U.S. jurisdiction.

The sanctions forced Lukoil to sell its international portfolio. This included oilfields and refineries from Iraq to Finland. Over a dozen buyers have expressed interest in the sale, ranging from ExxonMobil of the United States to Pornhub's former owner.

Three sources claim that OFAC was handling the asset sale of Lukoil, but recently the process escalated, involving senior officials from the White House Treasury and State Departments, including Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent.

The White House, State Department and Treasury did not respond to requests to comment on the extension of the deadline being connected to the peace negotiations. Lukoil didn't respond to comments.

In a statement made earlier this month, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy claimed that his intelligence services had informed him that Russian envoy Kirill Dimitriev was proposing an economic deal worth $12 trillion to the Trump Administration. According to a source familiar with the situation, this deal also includes Lukoil's assets. This could complicate any sale.

The United States, Saudi Arabia's?Midad Energy and Todd Boehly of the American billionaire Todd Boehly have all signed agreements with Lukoil. Carlyle Group private equity, Saudi Arabian?Midad Energy and Todd Boehly, an American billionaire, have all signed agreements with Lukoil.

Chevron is in talks with Texas-based Quantum Capital Group for the portfolio but terms have not been agreed upon yet. Reporting by Anna Hirtenstein in London, Dmitry Zhdannikov and Marwa Rashad in Washington and Timothy Gardner in London; editing by Lisa Shumaker

(source: Reuters)