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BackUK to impose tougher export controls to prevent goods reaching Russia via third countries
UK to impose tougher export controls to prevent goods reaching Russia via third countries
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Guardian Business4/22/2026Politics2 min readUnited Kingdom

UK to impose tougher export controls to prevent goods reaching Russia via third countries

Government to require licences for exports to countries suspected of acting as staging posts for Russian-bound goods, after Guardian reporting on carbon fibre equipment to Armenia

Quick Look

  • The UK government will unveil new export controls on Wednesday requiring manufacturers to obtain licences for goods destined for countries suspected of acting as staging posts for Russian-bound exports.
  • The measures aim to prevent sanctions evasion and undermine Putin's war machine in Ukraine.
  • Business minister Chris Bryant said the controls would have been used on dozens of occasions previously, after concerns were raised about UK carbon fibre equipment being exported to an Armenian firm with links to Russia's military production.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

The UK has been working to strengthen its sanctions regime against Russia since the invasion of Ukraine. This article follows Guardian reporting on carbon fibre equipment exports to Armenia that raised concerns about potential diversion to Russia's war machine.

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British firms will face “much tougher” controls to prevent their goods from reaching Russia via other countries, undermining sanctions and aiding Vladimir Putin’s assault on Ukraine. Under plans to be unveiled on Wednesday, the government will be able to require UK manufacturers to obtain a licence if they want to export to a country suspected of acting as a staging post for exports ultimately destined for Russia. It comes after the business minister, Chris Bryant, ordered a review of a decision to allow UK carbon fibre equipment to be exported to an Armenian firm with links to Russia’s war machine, after reporting by the Guardian. Liam Byrne MP, chair of the business select committee, had written to Bryant raising concerns about the planned export of machinery that can be used in the production of military hardware such as drones and missiles. In a subsequent evidence session with Byrne’s committee, Bryant said the government was planning to strengthen export licensing laws to plug gaps in export controls. Details of new controls will be set out in a statutory instrument to be laid on Wednesday, outlining measures that Bryant said were “much tougher than what we have at the moment”. The government was “motivated by concern that our sanctions regime is being undermined by diversion, which is not normally the deliberate intention of the exporter but is certainly the intention of the Russian state”. Bryant said the new measures were meant to “debilitate the Russian economy so as to debilitate its military capacity in Ukraine … We’re trying to be ahead of the curve because Putin has been successful at getting what he needs to prosper financially.” At the moment, the UK government can flag up its concerns to an exporter if it thinks that the company may be exporting goods to a country believed to be likely to pass the goods on to Russia. However, it cannot stop them from going ahead anyway. Under the new system, companies would need to obtain a licence from the Office for Trade Sanctions Implementation if there is any concern among officials about “diversion”, where sanctioned goods are funnelled to Russia via a third-party country. The new licensing regime means that in such cases, goods could be stopped at the border before leaving the country if no such licence has been obtained. Had the new controls been in place previously, he said they would have been used on “dozens” of occasions, Bryant said. Asked if the measures could add costs for businesses, he said: “If they’re profitable from making money out of the war in Ukraine, that is on them.”

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • More statutory instruments will follow to expand the list of high-risk destination countries

    Likely · Within months

  • Other Western nations may implement similar measures

    Possible · Within months

Open Questions

  • Which specific countries will be targeted as suspected staging posts?
  • How many export licences have been denied under previous system?
  • What is the Armenian company's name and its specific links to Russia?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by Guardian Business.

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