Short-term Russian pipeline import contracts expire on Wednesday 17 June under the EU import ban adopted in January, and no stay application at the CJEU had been confirmed as of Monday 8 June 1. The CJEU is the Court of Justice of the European Union, the bloc's supreme court in Luxembourg. With nine days left, the ban binds on schedule unless a court intervenes, removing roughly 5 bcm/year of short-term supply that flows today to Hungary, Slovakia and Austria.
Hungary filed its CJEU challenge on 2 February and Slovakia signalled it would join , but neither has produced an injunction, and an intent to litigate is not a stay. ACER's May derogation opinions confirmed both states cannot fully apply EU gas network codes without simultaneous Russian and Turkish operator cooperation . ACER is the Agency for the Cooperation of Energy Regulators, the EU body coordinating national regulators; its opinions explain the resistance but do not pause a trade-law deadline.
The market read sits in the Central European basis. CEGH in Vienna, PVB in Spain and PSV in Italy price the supply the ban removes; whether they blow out against TTF as 17 June arrives is the test, against a prior Central European premium above EUR 2/MWh. The TurkStream physical-degradation story belongs to the Russia-Ukraine desk and is context here, not the claim on this page.
