The latest round of sanctions is a follow-up on penalties imposed by the US against Iran last month. According to a EU statement released on Thursday, 39 individuals and 141 companies have been targeted to have possible links with Iran’s nuclear program. These parties are expected to face economic sanctions from the EU including a travel ban as well as the freezing of their assets in the region.
However, some EU states are hesitant to extend the sanctions to an oil embargo against Iran.
“Greece has a certain number of reservations,” said French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe. Iran accounts for about 5.7 percent of Europe’s oil imports, while Greece recently stepped up its purchases of Iranian oil because other suppliers were suspicious of the nation’s credit.
Petroleum analysts have also warned that global energy prices would rise even further if, and when, an oil embargo is imposed on Iran. The tumult in the Muslim world has already pushed up oil prices this year to record level, with the rebellion in Libya boosting the price of European benchmark Brent crude to more than $125 a barrel in April.
Still, most observers believe that the EU will hammer out tougher sanctions against Iran come their next meeting in January.
EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton added that the bloc would “look at a range of issues including the energy sector, but the detail of exactly what shall be done now goes to the technical experts.”