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European Energy Markets
15JUN

EU Russian LNG ban begins; TTF barely flinches

3 min read
12:23UTC

The European Union's short-term ban on Russian liquefied natural gas (LNG) entered force on Saturday 25 April, removing 2.8 to 3.5 million tonnes per year of spot supply. TTF front-month settled at EUR 44.86/MWh, only 5.8% above the 22 April close.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

Russian LNG ban entered force at TTF EUR 44.86, only 5.8% above the 22 April close.

The European Union's short-term ban on Russian LNG spot contracts entered force on Saturday 25 April , removing roughly 2.8 to 3.5 million tonnes per year of supply, around 3% of EU LNG imports 1. The benchmark Dutch TTF (Title Transfer Facility) front-month contract, the European gas price of record, settled the same day at EUR 44.86/MWh, only 5.8% above the 22 April close of EUR 42.39 2. Long-term contracts held by TotalEnergies, Naturgy and SEFE remain grandfathered to 1 January 2027 3.

The convergence had been on the calendar for weeks: ban day, Hammerfest LNG offline through at least 10 July, and Hormuz still physically closed, three independent supply removals inside one week. Wood Mackenzie's Tom Marzec-Manser told Bloomberg there was "no risk to supply just yet, but that could change in a couple of months" 4, and the EUR 2.46 settle change between 22 April and ban day was within normal weekly volatility. Bloomberg attributed the year-to-date 40% TTF rise to the Middle East conflict rather than the ban itself 5.

The muted print reflects pre-positioning more than slack. Russian LNG flows had already dropped to roughly one third of normal volumes since February, the Hormuz closure was already in the curve, and Germany flipped to net injection three days before ban day at a season-high pace. The TTF settle below EUR 45 puts Bruegel's base refill scenario at EUR 26 billion as the operative number, EUR 9 billion under the political consensus. The bearish read: Hammerfest historical overruns put 10 July at risk, the Arc7 ice-class shipping carve-out is unresolved, and Italy-France day-ahead cleared a EUR 153/MWh spread on Sunday 26 April that the gas curve does not reflect.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The European Union banned the purchase of short-term, or "spot", contracts for Russian liquefied natural gas (LNG) on 25 April 2026. LNG is natural gas that has been chilled to liquid form so it can be shipped by tanker, rather than piped. The ban removes roughly 3% of the EU's LNG imports. The reason gas prices barely moved is that markets knew the ban was coming for weeks and adjusted in advance. Some companies, including TotalEnergies and Naturgy, have existing long-term deals with Russian suppliers that are exempt until 1 January 2027, so the immediate effect is limited.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Russia's LNG export infrastructure was built to bypass pipeline-route political risk, a design choice made after the 2006 and 2009 Ukraine transit disputes. Yamal LNG and Arctic LNG projects were structured to reach both European and Asian buyers via independent maritime routes, which is why a European spot ban cannot eliminate Russian supply but only reroute it.

The grandfathering of long-term contracts to January 2027 reflects the EU's inability to expropriate private contractual rights under member-state and EU commercial law. TotalEnergies and Naturgy have valid take-or-pay obligations; forcing early termination would expose member states to arbitration claims under Energy Charter Treaty successor provisions.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    The January 2027 long-term contract cliff creates a second, larger substitution event when TotalEnergies, Naturgy and SEFE must simultaneously replace grandfathered Russian volumes in a tighter Atlantic LNG market.

    Medium term · 0.75
  • Consequence

    Russian spot LNG rerouted to Asian buyers displaces volumes Asian buyers would otherwise have purchased on Atlantic spot markets, indirectly tightening the Atlantic pool available to European importers.

    Short term · 0.7
  • Precedent

    The grandfathering structure sets a template for future EU energy sanctions: self-imposed supply removal with a pre-announced date, allowing price pre-positioning and reducing acute market shock at the cost of a deferred cliff.

    Long term · 0.65
First Reported In

Update #5 · Ban day muted; Germany doubles injection rate

OilPriceAPI· 26 Apr 2026
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Different Perspectives
Equinor
Equinor
Equinor stacked a 13-16 June planned maintenance window on Hammerfest LNG directly atop the unresolved compressor fault running since 22 April, creating two simultaneous live stoppages at 4.3 mtpa capacity for the first time. The 10 July return target carries overrun risk: the same compressor class slipped 24 days in the 2025 maintenance cycle.
EDF and French nuclear-anchored power buyers
EDF and French nuclear-anchored power buyers
EDF's fleet repriced French July contracts roughly 10% in two days on cooling-water curtailment risk, flipping the FR-DE spread to France EUR 1.6 above Germany after a EUR 96.20 record in the other direction a week earlier. Industrial buyers long France against short Germany face EUR 97.7/MWh of spread swing in seven calendar days.
Hungary and Slovakia supply-security ministries
Hungary and Slovakia supply-security ministries
Hungary's Tisza government has reframed Russian gas dependency as a systemic risk, removing Budapest as a co-plaintiff in the CJEU challenge; MVM's 3.5 bcm long-term TurkStream contract remains exempt to September 2027, so Budapest's near-term supply is intact. Slovakia under Fico presses its QMV challenge alone and faces a 3-4 bcm/year short-term supply gap with no contracted LNG alternative.
LNG spot traders and cargo routers
LNG spot traders and cargo routers
At JKM-TTF of USD 5.26/MMBtu, every uncommitted Atlantic cargo loading in late June routes east; the arb sits roughly twice the OIES-assessed diversion threshold of USD 2.50-3.00/MMBtu after freight. European storage terminals are the losing bid in the cargo auction until TTF recovers or JKM eases.
European Commission / ACER
European Commission / ACER
The Commission structured Regulation 2026/261 as a QMV trade measure to resist Article 194 unanimity challenges; the six-origin prior-authorisation waiver acknowledges that LNG capacity cannot substitute pipeline gas within the legislative window. ACER's cross-border enforcement powers activate in H2 2026, but jurisdiction over the Kipi entry point is legally contested.
German CCGT capacity planners
German CCGT capacity planners
Capacity planners at Uniper and RWE face the StromVKG Wirtschaftsausschuss scrutiny as the decisive near-term fork: if the Greens' hydrogen-conversion amendment passes, the September 2026 auction becomes unbiddable on technology risk grounds and the capacity-payment fix delays into winter. Plants that have run at -EUR 44 spark spread for weeks cannot commercially sustain extended shut-in.