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European Energy Markets
11JUN

Russian LNG hits quarterly record; double cliff looms

3 min read
09:04UTC

IEEFA data shows EU imports of Russian LNG rose 16% year-on-year in Q1 2026 to a quarterly record, with France, Spain and Belgium as principal recipients, just weeks before the EU's short-term spot ban entered force on 25 April.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

The effective Russian LNG cutoff is late November 2026, not 1 January 2027; no replacement supply has been named.

IEEFA published data on 13 May showing EU imports of Russian LNG rose 16% year-on-year in Q1 2026, hitting a quarterly record. France, Spain and Belgium received the largest shares, all three maintaining anti-Russian-energy postures while importing more Russian gas than ever. The US supplied 63% of Europe's LNG imports in the same quarter, up from 57% in Q1 2025, while Middle Eastern volumes fell to their lowest since 2019 on the Hormuz disruption.

The Q1 record captures pre-ban spot volumes. The EU's short-term Russian LNG ban entered force on 25 April ; only long-term contracts remain legal through year-end. The real test lands on 1 January 2027, when two cliffs arrive simultaneously: long-term LNG contracts expire and the EU's terminal services ban activates. Terminal operators at Zeebrugge, Montoir and Bilbao must refuse Yamal and Arctic cargoes from the same date. The 20th sanctions package, adopted 23 April, listed 632 shadow fleet vessels and added Karimun in Indonesia as the first third-country port listing, setting a precedent for sanctions extraterritoriality.

TotalEnergies, Shell and other long-term contract holders face a replacement problem concentrated in a six-month procurement window. Terminal logistics require booking weeks ahead; the real deadline is late November 2026, not 1 January 2027. No replacement supply has been publicly named.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Russia currently ships liquefied natural gas to Europe on specialised tankers, some of which can operate in Arctic ice. From 1 January 2027, European ports will be banned from accepting those tankers, and the long-term contracts that TotalEnergies and Shell hold with Russian LNG projects will also expire on the same date. This means two separate supply relationships end simultaneously. The companies have roughly six months to find replacement gas from other suppliers, mainly the United States. The catch is that all of Europe's major buyers will be competing for the same replacement supply in the same six-month window, which is likely to push prices up.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The terminal services ban represents the EU sanctioning its own infrastructure operators: Zeebrugge (Fluxys), Montoir (EDF/Total) and the Spanish terminals must refuse Arc7 and Yamal LNG cargoes regardless of contract status. This creates a legal and operational conflict for terminal operators who hold take-or-pay agreements with Russian LNG projects.

The Q1 2026 record import figure reflects front-loading before the 25 April short-term ban, not a structural preference for Russian LNG; making the 1 January 2027 cliff a policy-imposed disruption rather than a market-driven supply change, with procurement timelines driven by terminal booking cycles rather than price signals.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    The real procurement deadline for TotalEnergies and Shell is late November 2026, not 1 January 2027, because LNG terminal bookings require 6-8 weeks of lead time. The effective window for securing replacement supply at competitive prices closes by mid-October 2026.

    Medium term · Reported
  • Risk

    If two or three of the six Arc7 ice-class carriers due for dry-dock in summer 2026 fail to secure non-EU servicing (Singapore, China, UAE), Yamal LNG faces breakdown risk through winter 2026-27; a supply disruption that falls outside every EU published refill model.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Precedent

    The Karimun third-country port listing establishes that EU sanctions can now target non-EU infrastructure used in Russian LNG logistics chains, potentially deterring Singapore and UAE transshipment hubs from servicing Russian vessels and raising the cost of Russian LNG globally.

    Long term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #13 · Storage on track by 45 GWh; one outage away

Euronews· 29 May 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
Russian LNG hits quarterly record; double cliff looms
The Q1 record captures pre-ban spot volumes; the real test lands on 1 January 2027, when long-term contract expiry and the terminal services ban arrive simultaneously, creating a double cliff that compresses the replacement procurement window to Q3-Q4 2026.
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