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EU Pledges Steps to Salvage Iran Oil Shipments `Within Weeks'

EU leaders will debate their reaction over a dinner meeting in Sofia on Wednesday.

EU Pledges Steps to Salvage Iran Oil Shipments `Within Weeks'
A flag of the European Union flies outside the European Commission building in Brussels (Photographer: Jasper Juinen/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- The European Union set out to identify “practical solutions” for salvaging the Iran nuclear accord within weeks, as the bloc strives to contain the fallout from President Donald Trump’s decision to pull the plug from the landmark deal.

Technical experts from both sides were commissioned to find ways to maintain oil shipments and to protect European companies doing business with Iran, EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini told reporters in Brussels late on Tuesday. The experts will also propose ways to avert disruptions in air, sea and land transport from and to Iran and keep channels open for “effective banking transactions.”

The list of goals amounts to a European refusal to accept that Trump’s decision last week to withdraw from the 2015 deal will spell its demise, underscoring a growing rift between the traditional allies. While members of the Trump administration have advised European companies to stop doing business with Iran now, Mogherini said the European aim was “maintaining and deepening economic relations with Iran.”

“If we want to save this deal, which is not an easy exercise, we know that the sooner we do it then the easier it will be,” Mogherini said after meeting the foreign ministers of the U.K., France, Germany and Iran in Brussels. Both the EU and Iran have vowed to keep implementing the deal, despite the threat of U.S. sanctions after Trump’s decision to withdraw.

EU leaders will debate their reaction over a dinner meeting in Sofia on Wednesday, while the bloc’s executive arm will discuss the technical preparations in a meeting also on Wednesday. Mogherini raised the possibility of instituting a so-called blocking statute, which would protect European companies from any U.S. sanctions.

She didn’t specify which measures could be put in place to bypass U.S. sanctions, and protect European companies from potential punitive actions, repeating on several occasions that the technical details will be presented in a matter of weeks.

--With assistance from James Kraus

To contact the reporters on this story: Nikos Chrysoloras in Brussels at nchrysoloras@bloomberg.net, Richard Bravo in Brussels at rbravo5@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Vidya Root at vroot@bloomberg.net, Alan Crawford, Richard Bravo

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