20 Oct
20Oct

The European Union is on the brink of enacting a comprehensive plan to completely end its reliance on Russian gas by the close of 2027, a move prompted by Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

EU Energy Ministers met in Luxembourg to agree on the details of the law, which initiates the ban by prohibiting short-term Russian gas contracts starting in mid-June. While landlocked nations Hungary and Slovakia will receive a temporary exemption due to a lack of alternatives, the overall ban is set to proceed, as the law only requires a qualified majority to pass. The prohibition will extend to long-term contracts 18 months later.

Shift to US LNG and Broader Goals

The EU is simultaneously facing pressure from the United States to accelerate this exit and secure more American liquefied natural gas (LNG).

  • US Deal: The push, led by the US administration, involves a joint EU-US statement outlining a massive $750 billion energy trade between the two sides over the next three years.
  • Diversification: The EU's energy commissioner explicitly stated the bloc is "diversifying our gas imports," which translates to heavily increasing reliance on US LNG.
  • Urgency for Deeper Cuts: Critics argue the ongoing gas payments, which cost the EU €500 million to €700 million monthly, fuel Russia's war effort. As a result, the European Parliament is advocating for an even faster timeline, including a ban on Russian oil imports starting next year. The European Commission is also specifically pushing for a ban on Russian LNG imports by the end of 2025.

Ministers are currently working through technical specifics of the gas ban, reviewing the energy situation in Ukraine, and ensuring the final 2027 plan aligns with the US LNG deal and other electrification goals.

Oil Markets in Decline

In separate news, oil markets are in a slump, with Brent crude and WTI both extending a third consecutive weekly loss. The decline is attributed to slowing global demand and increasing supply, particularly as OPEC+ unwinds earlier production cuts and the International Energy Agency (IEA) warns of a supply surplus by 2026.

October 2025, Cryptoniteuae

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