The so-called "mini package" expands the EU’s existing blacklist, adding travel bans, asset freezes and financing restrictions.
EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said the measures would further constrain Russia’s defence industry and cut revenues from its energy sector.
The new blacklist targets senior figures and companies across Russia's military-industrial complex – suppliers of drones, missiles, satellite components, electronics, machinery and naval equipment – as well as oil traders and firms helping Moscow evade existing restrictions.
Also hit are companies from China, Hong Kong, Belarus, Azerbaijan, Turkey, the United Arab Emirates and Liberia providing technical support to the country.
The measures also cover oil sector firms using vessels from Russia's so-called shadow fleet to transport crude oil in breach of international sanctions.
The measures are described as limited in scope.
A fuller 21st sanctions package, proposed by the European Commission last week, still requires unanimous approval from all EU member states before it can pass.
(ał)
Source: IAR