EU’s Russian LNG Imports Hit Record High Ahead of 2027 Ban

The European Union imported a record 9.97 million metric tons of liquefied natural gas (LNG)  worth €5.96 billion (~$6.82 billion) from Russia’s Yamal LNG facility in the first half of 2026, marking a 16% increase compared to the same period in 2025 as they front-loaded Russian energy supplies ahead of impending phase-out bans. Kpler data shows that European buyers absorbed over 97% of the Siberian facility’s total output during the first half of the year, despite years-long efforts to overcome dependency on Russian energy.

Overall EU imports of Russian LNG increased by 11% Y/Y during the period, while imports of Russian pipeline gas increased 7%Y/Y, according to the data.

Supply bottlenecks in the Middle East, including blockades in the Strait of Hormuz and damage to Qatari infrastructure, forced European buyers to lean heavily on readily available Arctic gas.

The EU’s ban on short-term Russian LNG imports went into effect on April 25, 2026, under the REPowerEU Gas Regulation. However, exemptions built into the regulation have allowed European buyers to maintain or even accelerate their intake of Russian gas before a complete blanket ban takes effect on January 1, 2027. While LNG faces tighter initial phase-outs, pipeline imports from Russia under short-term legacy contracts were given until June 17, 2026 while long-term pipeline gas remains legally permitted until September 30, 2027.

Set OilPrice.com as a preferred source in Google .

France, Belgium, and Spain are the largest buyers of LNG from the Yamal facility, while Hungary is the largest buyer of pipeline gas shipments delivered via the TurkStream pipeline.

Meanwhile, Hungary and Slovakia continue to receive Russian crude via the southern branch of the Druzhba pipeline as they hold official temporary exemptions from the EU’s embargo on Russian seaborne oil. A Russian airstrike damaged the pipeline in Ukraine, entirely halting oil flows to both nations for nearly three months. Both were forced to rely on emergency reserves and alternative routes such as Croatia’s Adria pipeline during the disruption.

In response, Hungary and Slovakia have agreed to construct a new 127 km pipeline exclusively to transport refined oil products between their respective major refineries.

By Alex Kimani for Oilprice.com

More Top Reads From Oilprice.com

 

  • Related Posts

    Why Renewed Iran Tensions Could Keep Fuel Prices Elevated

    The oil market has officially entered its mixed-signals era. Crude prices had erased most of their wartime gains as barrels returned to the market and fears of oversupply resurfaced. But…

    Masdar Secures $5.1 Billion for World’s Largest Solar-and-Battery Project

    Masdar on Monday announced it had lined up financing for the world’s first gigascale Round-the-Clock renewable energy project, which the renewable energy giant of the United Arab Emirates is developing…

    Have You Seen?

    Strait of Hormuz Tanker Traffic Falls to Five-Week Low

    • July 14, 2026
    Strait of Hormuz Tanker Traffic Falls to Five-Week Low

    France Cuts 6.4 GW of Nuclear Power as Heatwave Grips the Country

    • July 14, 2026
    France Cuts 6.4 GW of Nuclear Power as Heatwave Grips the Country

    Masdar Secures $5.1 Billion for World’s Largest Solar-and-Battery Project

    • July 14, 2026
    Masdar Secures $5.1 Billion for World’s Largest Solar-and-Battery Project

    EU’s Russian LNG Imports Hit Record High Ahead of 2027 Ban

    • July 14, 2026
    EU’s Russian LNG Imports Hit Record High Ahead of 2027 Ban

    Why Renewed Iran Tensions Could Keep Fuel Prices Elevated

    • July 14, 2026
    Why Renewed Iran Tensions Could Keep Fuel Prices Elevated

    Iran Declares Strait of Hormuz Closed as ‘Unauthorised’ Vessel Hit

    • July 13, 2026
    Iran Declares Strait of Hormuz Closed as ‘Unauthorised’ Vessel Hit

    Oil Gains Over 2% as Fresh Military Srikes Threaten Hormuz Shipments

    • July 13, 2026
    Oil Gains Over 2% as Fresh Military Srikes Threaten Hormuz Shipments

    US Cost for Gas Power at 17-Year High and Climbing, Lazard Says

    • July 13, 2026
    US Cost for Gas Power at 17-Year High and Climbing, Lazard Says

    TRUMP WANTS CONTROL: Trump Says the US Will Control Strait of Hormuz and Get Paid For It

    • July 13, 2026
    TRUMP WANTS CONTROL: Trump Says the US Will Control Strait of Hormuz and Get Paid For It

    Iraq’s Prime Minister Seeks Big Energy Investments on US Trip

    • July 13, 2026
    Iraq’s Prime Minister Seeks Big Energy Investments on US Trip