Welcome to the Brussels Edition. I’m Suzanne Lynch, Bloomberg’s Brussels bureau chief, bringing you the latest from the EU each weekday. Make sure you're signed up. More than a month after the European Commission presented its 19th sanctions package targeting Russia, EU leaders are poised to give the final signoff at their summit tomorrow in Brussels. The package, which includes a phase-out of LNG purchases, targets Russian banks, crypto exchanges and entities in India and China, marks the latest effort by the EU to punish Russia for the war in Ukraine. But agreement on the proposal had stalled for several weeks as Austria, Hungary and Slovakia threw up roadblocks. Austria wanted the package to unfreeze assets linked to Russian tycoon Oleg Deripaska to help compensate Raiffeisen Bank International AG for penalties it paid in Russia. The country ultimately gave up the request after it received little support. Hungary followed suit on Monday, while Slovakian Prime Minister Robert Fico told the parliament in Bratislava this morning that his country would endorse the package if its demands are met. The agreement is likely to be the key deliverable at the summit, as the EU scrambles to show continuing support for Ukraine amid flip-flopping by the US. Robert Fico Photographer: DOMINIC GWINN/AFP Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy will travel to Brussels for the one-day summit amid signs that the planned meeting in Budapest between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin has been scrapped for now. In the background, European nations are working with Ukraine on a 12-point proposal to end Russia’s war along current battle lines, Bloomberg reported. Among its proposals – a peace board chaired by Trump. Members of the “Coalition of the Willing” will gather in London on Friday for further discussions, while NATO chief Mark Rutte is set to meet with Trump at the White House today. Also on the summit’s agenda will be a discussion on EU competitiveness, with several member states expected to raise concerns about relations with China following Beijing’s announcement of plans to significantly tighten controls on its exports of rare earths and other critical materials. These inputs are essential to a range of European sectors from electric vehicle batteries to defense manufacturing. As Alberto Nardelli and Jorge Valero report today, the Commission is preparing a list of trade measures by the end of the month that can later be deployed against China to boost its negotiating leverage. The EU’s trade chief Maros Sefcovic held talks with his Chinese counterpart Wang Wentao yesterday without reaching an agreement that addressed the bloc’s concerns. |