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European Energy Markets
26MAY

Russian LNG short-term ban lands without grace period

3 min read
12:01UTC

Squire Patton Boggs guidance on 22 April confirmed the 25 April short-term ban has no compliance window; Arc7 is the only narrow carve-out.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

No grace period on Friday's Russian LNG ban leaves Arc7 vessel-class ambiguity as the only narrow loophole.

Squire Patton Boggs published guidance on 22 April 2026 confirming the EU Russian LNG short-term contract ban enters force on 25 April with no compliance grace period and no transition window 1. Legacy long-term contracts remain grandfathered to 1 January 2027, a structural asymmetry that rewards long-dated buyers and gives spot and short-term buyers a hard stop on Friday. EU insurers face significant constraints on paying claims where funds could reach state-owned entities outside listed exemptions.

The guidance closes a door traders had been watching. Compliance teams had modelled scenarios around a phase-in for counterparties with existing short-term positions; the firm's reading of the recast text removes that path. Approximately 1.5 bcm per month of potential inbound disappears from the addressable short-term market on 25 April, compounding the Hammerfest removal landing in the same week.

The Arc7 Yamal ice-class shipping lane is the only narrow carve-out. 11 of 15 Arc7 vessels are European-owned (Seapeak Maritime, Dynagas), and the recast text does not explicitly prohibit rerouting or resale, leaving vessel-level ambiguity that traders will test immediately. Squire Patton Boggs note no FAQ guidance addresses Arc7 specifically. The loophole lands at the molecule level narrower than the market had hoped: a vessel-class carve-out rather than a contract-class one, meaning case-by-case legal exposure rather than a general exemption pathway.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

From 25 April 2026, European companies can no longer buy Russian natural gas under short-term contracts. Longer contracts signed before this date can continue until early 2027, but any new or rolling short-term deal is banned. A loophole exists for a specific type of Arctic-rated tanker called Arc7, but lawyers disagree on whether companies can use it without breaking the rules.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Spot buyers without long-term Atlantic LNG contracts face a structurally tighter procurement market from 25 April, with no analogous volume available at comparable pricing.

    Immediate · 0.9
  • Risk

    Arc7 rerouting activity will begin immediately after 25 April; ACER has no published enforcement guidance on indirect acquisition via non-Russian intermediaries, creating legal exposure for the first movers that test the loophole.

    Short term · 0.72
  • Precedent

    The long-term/short-term grandfather asymmetry establishes a legislative template that future sanctions rounds can replicate, progressively ratcheting down Russian LNG access without triggering long-term contract breach.

    Long term · 0.85
First Reported In

Update #4 · AccelerateEU skips gas; three removals land

Squire Patton Boggs· 22 Apr 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Russian LNG short-term ban lands without grace period
Compliance teams lose any grace-period hope three days out, and the Arc7 shipping-class ambiguity becomes the only operative loophole for the roughly 1.5 bcm per month of short-term volumes removed from the market.
Different Perspectives
Cefic and European industrial gas offtakers
Cefic and European industrial gas offtakers
Chemical manufacturers running at 62-68% utilisation face mandate-funded storage that secures volume at above-commercial prices without reducing gas costs. A EUR 35bn refill bill, if confirmed, flows back through regulated network tariffs, adding directly to industrial energy costs already named by BASF and INEOS as structural.
OIES and energy research institutions
OIES and energy research institutions
Bruegel and OIES have not published a revised refill cost model at EUR 47-51 TTF with sub-0.4 pp/day pace. The EUR 35bn mid-range is drifting into use as the operative sub-80% November consensus, and the 11 June ACER workshop is the next venue where EU-level storage instrument advocacy can surface.
Equinor upstream gas
Equinor upstream gas
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German Economy Ministry and Bundesnetzagentur
German Economy Ministry and Bundesnetzagentur
Berlin confirmed on 20 May it will not introduce a summer injection-incentive scheme, leaving Germany as the EU's only major unincentivised market after the storage levy lapsed on 1 January 2026. Commercial injectors apparently used the 18 May EUR 50 spike to lock winter supply cost rather than book against a structurally negative strip.
CRE and French gas operators
CRE and French gas operators
CRE's 100% mandatory booking order funds French injection regardless of the inverted strip, providing the EU aggregate cover that masks Germany's gap. The French position is insulated from TTF price moves but exposed to CRE's annual renewal cycle, a political risk rather than a commercial one.
Amsterdam-Rotterdam gas trading desks
Amsterdam-Rotterdam gas trading desks
TTF's 8.1% crash on a deal headline despite 50-plus mcm/day of verified Norwegian outages settled the EUR 50 question: it is a diplomatic ceiling, not a floor, and the short EUR 50-strike summer position keeps paying until Iran resolves. EBN's price-insensitive mandate buying tightens the prompt but the EUR 233m budget cap is a known position risk.