With the news of OFSI imposing a civil penalty, Europe has today hit its 300th successfully-concluded enforcement action in relation to trade and financial sanctions and export controls since the start of 2017.
To mark the occasion we are publishing updated enforcement graphs which we last posted back in January when this blog first went live.
Total number of fines/penalties/convictions: 2017-2024
As the graph shows 2024 has, to date, been the most prolific in terms of sanctions enforcement in recent years with 69 so far this year. Already there have been three times as many successfully-concluded enforcement actions in Europe in 2024 as there were in 2017.
Total value of fines/penalties: 2017-2024
While the volume of enforcement has increased, the shape of this graph illustrates that the value of the fines imposed did not keep pace in the years following when the UK and French financial services regulators having imposed fines of £102m, €50m, and £38m.
After several years of plateau 2024 is, however, showing signs of acceleration with fines of over €32m imposed so far this year – more than double the figure for 2023.
Russian / Belarusian sanctions enforcement
Focusing just on enforcement of the sanctions against Russia and Belarus, perhaps unsurprisingly, the picture varies across Europe, although the total of 111 examples to date is worth stressing in and of itself.
This graph includes only enforcement actions that have concluded with a fine, penalty, conviction or confiscation. A total of 18 countries show no examples, although it is possible that there are such examples and they have not been made public. Poland, the Netherlands, Switzerland and Latvia are the only countries with more than 10 examples.
This is another way of looking at the same data. Again, this is specific to the Russia/Belarus sanctions, and is the number of concluded enforcements. This does not reflect the scale of the fines. A few countries dominate the picture.
Current investigations
Looking at publicly-available data on the number of current/live investigations reveals a similar picture. Many states appear to be currently inactive, while there are more than 2000 investigations which are reported as ongoing across Europe. That is a figure which bears repeating – more than 2000 ongoing regulatory/criminal sanctions investigations across Europe.
It should be remembered, however, that for most states such information has not been made public. In Germany alone nearly 2000 investigations have been started since early 2022, but the information is limited on how many of these remain active.