Times Network New Zealand
  • Home
  • Local News
  • World
  • Business
  • Lifetyle
  • Entertainment
  • Technology
  • Travel
  • Food
  • Editor’s Choice
  • Press Release
What's On
US lawmakers urge the EU to keep methane rules

US lawmakers urge the EU to keep methane rules

February 7, 2026
EU delays new sanctions on Russia as it seeks G7 coordination on price cap

EU delays new sanctions on Russia as it seeks G7 coordination on price cap

February 7, 2026
From Mamdani to Farage: AI-generated images spread after Epstein file release

From Mamdani to Farage: AI-generated images spread after Epstein file release

February 7, 2026
EU Parliament pushes for European preference in military mobility plan

EU Parliament pushes for European preference in military mobility plan

February 6, 2026
Watch the video: Who might have already won at Milano-Cortina Winter Olympics 2026?

Watch the video: Who might have already won at Milano-Cortina Winter Olympics 2026?

February 6, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Web Stories
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Times Network New Zealand
Subscribe
  • Home
  • Local News
  • World
  • Business
  • Lifetyle
  • Entertainment
  • Technology
  • Travel
  • Food
  • Editor’s Choice
  • Press Release
Times Network New Zealand
Home » Watch the video: Russian frozen assets — what’s next?
World

Watch the video: Russian frozen assets — what’s next?

By Press RoomNovember 25, 20252 Mins Read
Watch the video: Russian frozen assets — what’s next?
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email
Watch the video: Russian frozen assets — what’s next?

Published on
24/11/2025 – 18:51 GMT+1

The pot is massive: An estimated €300 billion in Russian Central Bank assets are frozen across the G7 countries.

The vast majority — to the tune of €185 billion — is locked here in Belgium by Euroclear, a securities depository.

Brussels planned to use the Russian frozen assets to issue an unprecedented reparations loan for Ukraine. But the US plan flips the script with a controversial proposal: unblock the funds and split them into two investment vehicles.

The first fund would be intended for Ukraine’s reconstruction. $100 billion of the frozen assets would be deployed, and Europe would have to front another $100 billion of its own cash. The catch? The US takes 50% of the profits.

The second pot would be used for a US-Russian joint venture. The rest of the money would be invested in projects for Moscow. Far from paying reparations for attacking its neighbour, the Kremlin is to be rewarded with a commercial opportunity.

The result? Moscow gets a win, Washington flips a profit, and Europe loses its main leverage. Brussels is not at the table — and it may end up reduced to a spectator with a very expensive bill to pay.

Watch the Euronews video in the player above for the full story.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Keep Reading

US lawmakers urge the EU to keep methane rules

US lawmakers urge the EU to keep methane rules

EU delays new sanctions on Russia as it seeks G7 coordination on price cap

EU delays new sanctions on Russia as it seeks G7 coordination on price cap

From Mamdani to Farage: AI-generated images spread after Epstein file release

From Mamdani to Farage: AI-generated images spread after Epstein file release

EU Parliament pushes for European preference in military mobility plan

EU Parliament pushes for European preference in military mobility plan

Watch the video: Who might have already won at Milano-Cortina Winter Olympics 2026?

Watch the video: Who might have already won at Milano-Cortina Winter Olympics 2026?

Podcast: Israel reopens the Rafah crossing: What does this mean for Gaza?

Podcast: Israel reopens the Rafah crossing: What does this mean for Gaza?

Donald Trump endorses Hungary’s Viktor Orbán ahead of key elections

Donald Trump endorses Hungary’s Viktor Orbán ahead of key elections

Council of Europe chief calls for political and financial backing of Ukraine Special Tribunal

Council of Europe chief calls for political and financial backing of Ukraine Special Tribunal

Ukraine peace deal without Kyiv would shatter Western credibility, Warsaw mayor tells Euronews

Ukraine peace deal without Kyiv would shatter Western credibility, Warsaw mayor tells Euronews

Editors Picks
EU delays new sanctions on Russia as it seeks G7 coordination on price cap

EU delays new sanctions on Russia as it seeks G7 coordination on price cap

February 7, 2026
From Mamdani to Farage: AI-generated images spread after Epstein file release

From Mamdani to Farage: AI-generated images spread after Epstein file release

February 7, 2026
EU Parliament pushes for European preference in military mobility plan

EU Parliament pushes for European preference in military mobility plan

February 6, 2026
Watch the video: Who might have already won at Milano-Cortina Winter Olympics 2026?

Watch the video: Who might have already won at Milano-Cortina Winter Olympics 2026?

February 6, 2026
Latest News
US lawmakers urge the EU to keep methane rules

US lawmakers urge the EU to keep methane rules

February 7, 2026
EU delays new sanctions on Russia as it seeks G7 coordination on price cap

EU delays new sanctions on Russia as it seeks G7 coordination on price cap

February 7, 2026
From Mamdani to Farage: AI-generated images spread after Epstein file release

From Mamdani to Farage: AI-generated images spread after Epstein file release

February 7, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest TikTok Instagram
© 2026 Times Network New Zealand. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.