Notice of Changes to the Consolidated List – 27 March 2026
DFAT updated the Consolidated List on 27 March 2026 following receipt of the attached advice from the United Nations Security Council Committee established pursuant to resolutions 1988 (2011) concerning Afghanistan and the Taliban. The changes include:
- Amendments to the listing of 22 individuals in accordance with the attached UN notice made on 10 March 2026
The updated Consolidated List can be downloaded from the following page: Consolidated List | Australian Government Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. Guidance on how to interpret the Consolidated List can be found here: Guide to Australia’s Consolidated List | Australian Government Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
If you have any queries, please contact the Australian Sanctions Office atsanctions@dfat.gov.au.
Australian Sanctions Office
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Australian Sanctions Office | Regulatory and Legal Policy Division
Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
Category: DFAT (Australia)
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Notice of Changes to the Consolidated List – 2 March 2026
DFAT updated the Consolidated List on 2 March 2026 pursuant to the below changes:
- The addition of 4 persons for targeted financial sanctions and travel bans pursuant toCharter of the United Nations (Sanctions — Sudan) Regulations 2008 commencing on 24 February 2026 (see attached UN notice)
- The delisting of 1 entity effective from 27/02/2026 (see attached UN notice)
- Administrative updates to standardise and improve the presentation of data in the Consolidated List
The updated Consolidated List can be downloaded from the following page: Consolidated List | Australian Government Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
If you have any queries, please contact the Australian Sanctions Office atsanctions@dfat.gov.au.
Australian Sanctions Office
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Notice of Changes to the Consolidated List – 24 February 2026
DFAT updated the Consolidated List on 24 February 2026 pursuant to the below listed legislative instruments made by the Minister for Foreign Affairs.
- Autonomous Sanctions (Designated Persons and Entities and Declared Persons – Russia and Ukraine) Amendment (No. 1) Instrument 2026 – Federal Register of Legislation
- Autonomous Sanctions (Sanctioned Vessels – Russia) Amendment (No. 1) Designation 2026 – Federal Register of Legislation
The updated Consolidated List can be downloaded from the following page: Consolidated List | Australian Government Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
Australian Sanctions Office
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Australian Sanctions Office | Regulatory and Legal Policy Division
Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
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© Brooke Rigney-Lively (2024)
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I asked Gemini to compare and contrast “ownership and control” guidance and regulation across the world. Based on the responses I got, I ended up adding FATF, Wolfsberg, Switzerland and Japan to the bodies offering guidance:
This comprehensive analysis compares the “Ownership and Control” guidance across major national and international bodies.
Executive Summary: The “Control” vs. “Ownership” Divide
The central divergence in global sanctions regulation lies in how “Control” is treated:
- The “Mathematical” Approach (US): Ownership (50% or more) automatically triggers sanctions. Control without ownership does not automatically trigger sanctions—it is merely grounds for future designation.
- The “Status-Based” Approach (EU, UK, Canada): If a sanctioned person controls an entity (even with 1% ownership), that entity is automatically treated as sanctioned by operation of law. This shifts the burden of identifying “shadow control” onto the private sector.
1. Comparative Matrix: Global Ownership & Control Rules
Jurisdiction Ownership Threshold Aggregation Rule Does “Control” Automatically Sanction? Key Differentiator USA (OFAC) 50% or more (≥ 50%) YES NO (See FAQ 398) Strict mathematical application; Control is a designation criteria, not an automatic trigger. EU (Council) 50% or more (≥ 50%)* YES YES Recent 2024 update aligned EU with US. Burden is on operators to detect “dominant influence.” UK (OFSI) More than 50% (> 50%) NO (Unless acting in concert) YES Higher threshold (>50%); Aggregation is rare; “Control” test is extremely broad. Canada (GAC) 50% or more (≥ 50%) Implied YES (“Deemed Ownership”) “Deemed ownership” legally conflates control and ownership into one trigger. Australia (ASO) “Owned or Controlled” Silent(Principles-based) YES Less prescriptive; relies on “due diligence” to determine if assets are “indirectly” controlled. Japan (MOF) “Substantial Control” Case-by-Case YES (Permission required) Uses a “Permission System” for payments rather than “Blocking” assets. Switzerland 50% or more De Facto Yes YES (Indirect Prohibition) Subsidiaries aren’t “blocked” per se, but paying them is “making funds indirectly available.” UN (Security Council) Varies by Regime N/A Varies No global standard; relies on Member State implementation.
2. Detailed Jurisdictional Analysis
United States: The Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC)
The US provides the most “bright-line” guidance, prioritizing clarity over catch-all nuance.
- The “50% Rule”: If Blocked Persons own 50% or more, individually or in the aggregate, the entity is blocked.
- Aggregation: Explicitly required. If SDN A owns 25% and SDN B owns 25%, the entity is blocked.
- The “Control” Gap: OFAC explicitly states (FAQ 398) that an entity controlled by an SDN (but owned <50%) is not automatically blocked.
- Why? OFAC prefers to name and shame. If they want a controlled entity sanctioned, they will list it.
- Applicability: Applies to all OFAC regimes unless specified otherwise (e.g., Sectoral Sanctions).
European Union: Council & Commission
The EU has moved aggressively to close loopholes, resulting in complex “control” tests.
- Ownership Update (July 2024): The EU updated its “Best Practices” to align with the US, changing its test from “more than 50%” to “50% or more.”
- The “Control” Trigger: If a Designated Person (DP) has “dominant influence” (e.g., right to appoint board majority, use of assets), the entity is sanctioned.
- Burden of Proof: Unlike the US, EU operators must assess control themselves. If you trade with a subsidiary of a Russian oligarch, and the EU later decides the oligarch “controlled” it, you are liable for a breach, even if the subsidiary was never listed.
United Kingdom: Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation (OFSI)
The UK is unique for its rejection of automatic aggregation and its slightly higher ownership threshold.
- Threshold: Strictly “more than 50%.” A 50/50 Joint Venture is not automatically sanctioned in the UK (unlike US/EU).
- Aggregation: OFSI does not aggregate ownership of different DPs unless there is evidence they are parties to a “joint arrangement” (acting in concert).
- Broad “Control” Definition: The UK test asks if it is “reasonable to expect” that the DP can achieve their desires regarding the entity’s affairs. This is a functional, outcome-based test.
Canada: Global Affairs Canada (GAC)
Canada uses a unique legal mechanism called “Deemed Ownership.”
- Concept: Property is “deemed” to be owned by a DP if the DP “controls” it directly or indirectly.
- Ambiguity: The definition includes any situation where the DP can “direct the entity’s activities.” This creates significant gray areas for compliance teams, as “influence” is often conflated with “control.”
Australia: Australian Sanctions Office (ASO)
Australia utilizes a “principles-based” approach rather than strict mathematical formulas.
- Guidance: “Control” is defined as a question of fact—whether someone has “command or direction” over an asset.
- Differentiation: Australia does not publish a “50% Rule” document comparable to OFAC. Instead, it relies on the prohibition against “making assets available to” a DP. If a DP owns a company, paying that company is effectively paying the DP.
Japan: Ministry of Finance (MOF) & METI
Japan operates a “Permission System” under the Foreign Exchange and Foreign Trade Act (FEFTA).
- Mechanism: Rather than “blocking” an entity, Japan prohibits payments to DPs without “permission” (which is never granted).
- Substantial Control: Restrictions apply if a DP holds a majority of shares OR exercises “substantial control” (e.g., dispatching executives).
- End-User Lists: Japan places heavy reliance on METI’s “End User List.” If a subsidiary is not on the list, Japanese firms often presume trade is permitted unless “control” is glaringly obvious.
Switzerland: SECO
Switzerland aligns autonomously with the EU but maintains legal distinctiveness.
- “Making Available”: Swiss law does not always “block” the subsidiary of a DP. Instead, it prohibits “making funds available” to the DP.
- Interpretation: Paying a subsidiary is viewed as “indirectly” making funds available to the parent.
- Differentiation: In the Popov case, Swiss courts demanded high evidence of control. However, 2024 guidance has aligned Switzerland closer to the EU’s broad “control” presumption to prevent circumvention.
United Nations (UNSC)
- No Global Standard: The UN designates individuals/entities but leaves “ownership/control” interpretation to Member States.
- Regime Specific: Some resolutions (e.g., DPRK) include specific language on “entities owned or controlled by” designated persons, but the implementation of what “controlled” means (e.g., 50% vs 25%) is decided by national authorities (OFAC, OFSI, etc.).
3. International Standard Setters
FATF (Financial Action Task Force)
- Focus: Anti-Money Laundering (AML) & Beneficial Ownership (BO).
- The “25% Gap”: FATF recommends a 25% threshold for identifying beneficial owners for AML screening.
- Conflict: This creates a disconnect. Compliance teams screen at 25% (for FATF/AML) but block at 50% (for Sanctions). FATF guidance on “Proliferation Financing” urges countries to look beyond legal ownership to “ultimate effective control” to prevent evasion.
The Wolfsberg Group
- Guidance: Represents global banking best practices.
- Recommendation: Wolfsberg explicitly notes that the “50% Rule” is a legal baseline, not a risk management ceiling.
- Control Risk: They advise that relying solely on lists is insufficient in “Control-based” jurisdictions (UK/EU). They recommend screening for Beneficial Owners (at 10-25%) to identify “aggregation” risks that might sum up to >50%.
Summary of Practical Implications
- The “Joint Venture” Trap: A 50-50 JV with a sanctioned party is Blocked in the US/EU, but Allowed in the UK (statutorily, though high risk).
- The “Minority Owner” Risk: A company 25% owned by a sanctioned oligarch who appoints the CEO is Safe in the US (unless listed), but Radioactive in the EU/UK (due to “Control”).
- The “Aggregation” Headache: Three sanctioned individuals each owning 20% of a company results in a Block in the US/EU (60% total), but No Block in the UK (unless they are proven to be working together).
Source List for “Ownership and Control” Analysis
The following is a curated list of the primary government and regulatory source documents used in the comparative analysis.
1. United States (OFAC)
- Document: OFAC Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) – Questions 398, 401, and 50% Rule
- Description: The primary interpretive guidance for the “50 Percent Rule” and the distinction between ownership and control.
- URL: OFAC FAQ Topic: Entities Owned by Blocked Persons (50% Rule)
2. European Union (Council of the EU)
- Document: Update of the EU Best Practices for the Effective Implementation of Restrictive Measures (July 3, 2024)
- Description: The critical update that aligned the EU ownership threshold (“50% or more”) with the US and clarified the “Dominant Influence” control tests.
- URL: EU Best Practices (Council Document ST 11377 2024 INIT)
- Additional Source: Commission Consolidated FAQs on the Implementation of Council Regulation No 833/2014
- URL: European Commission Sanctions FAQs
3. United Kingdom (OFSI)
- Document: OFSI General Guidance – UK Financial Sanctions
- Description: See specifically Chapter 4 (Ownership and Control), which details the “reasonable to expect” test and the rejection of automatic aggregation.
- URL: OFSI General Guidance (GOV.UK)
4. Canada (Global Affairs Canada)
- Document: Special Economic Measures Act (SEMA) – Amendments regarding Deemed Ownership
- Description: The legislative text (Section 2.1) establishing that property controlled by a designated person is “deemed” to be owned by them.
- URL: Consolidated SEMA Legislation (Justice Laws Website)
- Guidance Page: Canadian Sanctions: Essential Information
- URL: GAC Sanctions Guidance
5. Australia (Australian Sanctions Office)
- Document: ASO Guidance Note: Dealing with Assets Owned or Controlled by Designated Persons
- Description: A thematic guidance note explaining the “control” test as a question of fact rather than a mathematical formula.
- URL: DFAT/ASO Sanctions Guidance Notes
6. Japan (MOF & METI)
- Document: Foreign Exchange and Foreign Trade Act (FEFTA) – Q&A and End User List
- Description: Technical guidance on the “permission” system for capital transactions and the list of entities requiring license verification.
- URL: METI Security Export Control Policy & Q&A
- URL: Ministry of Finance Economic Sanctions List (Japanese/English)
7. Switzerland (SECO)
- Document: Ordinance on Measures Connected with the Situation in Ukraine (FAQs)
- Description: The primary source for the “making funds available” interpretation and the alignment with EU “control” standards.
- URL: SECO Sanctions Measures & FAQs
8. The Wolfsberg Group
- Document: Wolfsberg Guidance on Sanctions Screening (2019)
- Description: Industry best practices recommending beneficial ownership screening (10-25%) to mitigate “Control” risks.
- URL: Wolfsberg Group Guidance on Sanctions Screening
9. Financial Action Task Force (FATF)
- Document: Guidance on Beneficial Ownership of Legal Persons
- Description: The global standard setting the 25% threshold for beneficial ownership, which conflicts with the 50% sanctions standard.
- URL: FATF Guidance on Beneficial Ownership
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The prompt:
Outside the US, what governments issue sanctions-related guidance, advisories, frequently-asked questions and other publications which clarify sanctions legislation and regulation? pease describe the types of publications and their level of detail and specificity for each government, and compare and contrast each country’s set of such documents, Do not limit yourself to English-language texts. And please quote all sources, with URLs when available.
The response:
The United States (via OFAC) is often viewed as the “gold standard” for volume and specificity of sanctions guidance. However, owing largely to the complex sanctions landscape post-2022 (Russia/Ukraine), other major economies have rapidly developed their own detailed interpretive infrastructure.
The following is an analysis of non-US government publications that clarify sanctions legislation, organized by jurisdiction.
1. United Kingdom: Office of Financial Sanctions Implementation (OFSI)
Since Brexit, the UK has developed a sanctions infrastructure that rivals the US in complexity and specificity. OFSI is the primary issuing body.
- Types of Publications:
- General Guidance: The “Standard Bearer” document. It covers the UK’s definition of ownership and control, licensing processes, and reporting obligations.
- Sector-Specific Guidance: Detailed guidance for Maritime shipping (oil price cap), Charity/NGOs, and Financial Services.
- FAQs: Extensive Q&A covering specific regulations (especially the Russia regulations).
- Blog/Alerts: OFSI uses its blog to publish “Red Alerts” on evasion typologies (e.g., gold, artwork).
- General Licences: Unlike the US, the UK publishes “General Licences” (GLs) with accompanying explanatory notes that act as effectively binding guidance on what is permitted.
- Level of Detail & Specificity: High.OFSI provides very specific interpretive guidance. For example, they define “ownership and control” in granular detail (e.g., examining “dominant influence” over a board of directors). They are one of the few bodies outside the US that publishes enforcement actions (monetary penalties) which serve as case-law-like guidance for the industry.
- Source: OFSI General Guidance and FAQs
2. European Union: European Commission & Council of the EU
The EU issues sanctions at the bloc level, but enforcement is done by member states. To ensure uniformity, the Commission has become extremely prolific in issuing interpretive guidance.
- Types of Publications:
- Consolidated FAQs: The primary vehicle for EU guidance. Since 2022, the Commission has published hundreds of pages of FAQs specifically on the Russia/Belarus regimes.
- “Best Practices” Guidelines: High-level documents from the Council of the EU detailing how to implement asset freezes or identifying beneficial ownership.
- Commission Opinions: Formal legal opinions on how to interpret specific articles of Council Regulations (e.g., whether “transfer” of goods includes transit).
- Level of Detail & Specificity: High (but Legalistic).EU guidance is often drafted by lawyers for lawyers. It focuses heavily on statutory interpretation (e.g., “Does Article 5aa prohibit X?”). It is less operational than US/UK guidance but provides definitive answers on scope, such as the exact calculation of “50% ownership” and whether it applies to aggregation of shares.
- Source: European Commission Sanctions FAQs
3. Australia: Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) & Australian Sanctions Office (ASO)
Australia has moved toward a user-friendly, toolkit-based approach for the private sector.
- Types of Publications:
- Sanctions Compliance Toolkit: A consolidated PDF designed for businesses/universities to build their own compliance programs.
- Guidance Notes: Thematic papers on specific high-risk sectors (e.g., “Conflict Minerals,” “Maritime Shipping,” “Ransomware”).
- Advisory Notes: Alerts on specific evasion risks.
- Level of Detail & Specificity: Medium.Australia’s guidance is excellent on process (how to assess risk, how to apply for a permit) but arguably offers fewer specific interpretive rulings on complex financial scenarios than the UK or EU. It relies heavily on “due diligence” principles rather than prescriptive rules.
- Source: Australian Sanctions Office Guidance Notes
4. Canada: Global Affairs Canada (GAC)
Historically, Canada provided very little guidance beyond the legislative text. This has changed significantly in recent years with the release of formal interpretive documents.
- Types of Publications:
- Sanctions Guidance: A formal document released to clarify “Deemed Ownership” (a unique Canadian concept where any entity in a sanctioned country might be “deemed” owned by that state).
- Thematic Guidance: Specific papers for the Financial Sector and Academic/Research Sector.
- Sanctions Notices: Updates notifying the public of new listings.
- Level of Detail & Specificity: Medium-Low.While improving, Canada’s guidance is often broader and less scenario-based. For example, while the definition of “property” is clarified, the specific application to complex financial instruments is often left to the “judgment” of the operator compared to the detailed FAQs of the EU.
- Source: Global Affairs Canada Sanctions Guidance
5. Japan: Ministry of Finance (MOF) & METI
Japan’s guidance differs culturally; it is often integrated into broader trade control and anti-money laundering (AML) frameworks rather than standing alone as “sanctions guidance.”
- Types of Publications:
- Trade Control Policy (METI): Detailed lists of controlled items and end-user lists (the “Foreign End User List”) which function as de facto sanctions lists.
- AML/CFT Guidelines (JFSA/MOF): Guidelines for financial institutions that include sections on asset freezing and screening.
- Q&A on Foreign Exchange and Foreign Trade Act: Technical Q&A on how to process payments to sanctioned jurisdictions.
- Level of Detail & Specificity: High (Technical).The guidance is highly technical regarding trade classifications (goods codes) and payment processing permissions. It is less focused on “sanctions evasion typologies” in the Western sense and more on administrative compliance with the Foreign Exchange and Foreign Trade Act.
- Source: METI Security Export Control Q&A (Japanese/English)
6. Singapore: Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS)
Singapore issues sanctions guidance strictly through its financial regulator, focusing on Financial Institutions (FIs).
- Types of Publications:
- MAS Regulations & Notices: Legally binding notices prohibiting transactions with specific countries (e.g., DPRK, Iran, Russia).
- “Red Flag” Indicators: Publications highlighting suspicious transaction indicators related to proliferation financing or sanctions evasion.
- FAQs: Specific Q&As for Financial Institutions regarding asset freezing implementation.
- Level of Detail & Specificity: Medium.The guidance is precise but narrow; it targets FIs almost exclusively. It is highly specific regarding the mechanics of freezing funds but offers less guidance for non-financial corporates (e.g., exporters, manufacturers) compared to the EU or UK.
- Source: MAS Targeted Financial Sanctions
Comparative Analysis
Feature UK (OFSI) EU (Commission) Australia (ASO) Canada (GAC) Japan (METI/MOF) Primary Focus Financial & Trade interpretation Legal interpretation for Member States Compliance process & Risk Assessment Legislative clarification Trade control & Admin procedure Format Detailed General Guidance + Blog Alerts Massive Consolidated FAQs “Toolkit” & Thematic Notes Thematic Webpages Technical Q&A & End-User Lists “Control” Defined? Yes (Very detailed tests) Yes (Detailed criteria) Yes (General principles) Yes (“Deemed ownership”) Implicit(subsidiary rules) Scenario Specificity High (e.g., Crypto, Maritime) High (e.g., Transit, IP rights) Medium (Sectoral risks) Low-Medium High (Product specs) Tone Collaborative but strict Legalistic / Formal Educational / Practical Advisory Administrative / Bureaucratic Summary for the User
- If you need US-style detail: Look to the UK (OFSI) and EU. They are the closest to providing “answers” to specific hypothetical scenarios.
- If you need to build a program: Australia’s “Toolkit” is one of the best structural guides for how to set up compliance, regardless of jurisdiction.
- If you are in Trade/Manufacturing: Japan (METI) and EU guidance provide the most detail on controlled goods codes and transit.
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Advisories, ASO (Australia), Burning Questions, Consultations, Determinations, DFAT (Australia), European Commission (EU), Executive Orders, Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs), Global Affairs Canada (Canada), Licensing, METI (Japan), Ministry of Finance (Japan), OFSI (UK), OSFI (Canada), Regulation, Regulatory, Reporting & Other Filings - Types of Publications:
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Notice of Changes to the Consolidated List – 3 February 2026
DFAT updated the Consolidated List on 3 February 2026 pursuant to the below listed legislative instrument made by the Minister for Foreign Affairs.
The updated Consolidated List can be downloaded from the following page:Consolidated List | Australian Government Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
Australian Sanctions Office
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Australian Sanctions Office | Regulatory and Legal Policy Division
Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
dfat.gov.au | X | Facebook | Instagram | LinkedIn
