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European Energy Markets
16JUL

Russian pipeline ban binds in nine days

4 min read
09:48UTC

Short-term Russian pipeline contracts expire on Wednesday 17 June under the EU import ban, and no CJEU stay had been confirmed as of Monday. The deadline removes roughly 5 bcm/year of Central European supply.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

Without a CJEU stay the 17 June ban binds on schedule, removing roughly 5 bcm/year of Central European supply.

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.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

For years, Hungary, Slovakia, and Austria have bought gas from Russia under short-term contracts. Those contracts expire on 17 June 2026 under a European Union ban on new Russian pipeline gas imports. After that date, buying short-term Russian pipeline gas becomes illegal under EU law. Hungary and Slovakia have argued in court, the CJEU (the EU's top court based in Luxembourg), that the ban was introduced incorrectly. But as of 8 June, nine days before the deadline, no judge has agreed to pause the ban while the case is heard. Without that judicial pause, called a stay, the deadline binds. The practical effect: gas that currently flows via Russian pipelines must be replaced from other sources. Hungary and Slovakia have longer-term Russian contracts via a different route through Turkey called TurkStream, which is not affected. But the short-term top-up volumes, roughly 5 billion cubic metres a year, go away on schedule.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The absence of a CJEU stay has two structural explanations.

The legal structure of the ban: it was framed as a trade-restriction measure under Article 207 TFEU (Common Commercial Policy), where the Commission has primacy and qualified majority voting applies, rather than a sanctions measure under Article 215 TFEU requiring unanimity.

Hungary and Slovakia's challenge that it should be reclassified as a sanction faces the CJEU's consistent jurisprudence favouring the trade-measure framing when a restriction has commercial rather than purely punitive objectives.

The supply structure of the affected states: ACER's derogation opinions confirmed that neither Hungary nor Slovakia can fully apply EU gas network codes without Russian and Turkish operator cooperation . This is a network-code compliance issue, not a market structure issue, and the CJEU does not adjudicate network-code disputes. The legal system and the technical reality are operating in parallel planes, which is why a challenge on one does not resolve the difficulty on the other.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    CEGH and PSV basis premiums above TTF may widen from the current EUR 2/MWh toward EUR 4-6/MWh on peak winter days after 17 June removes 5 bcm/year of short-term eastern-entry supply, per S&P Global Commodity Insights capacity-flow models.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Consequence

    Hungary's long-term Gazprom-TurkStream contract running to 2036 becomes the only legal Russian gas import route after 17 June, making TurkStream physical reliability the single most consequential infrastructure variable for Budapest's supply security.

    Immediate · Reported
  • Precedent

    A clean step-down on 17 June without a successful CJEU stay establishes that qualified-majority trade restrictions can override energy-security objections from directly affected member states, strengthening the Commission's hand in future supply-restriction negotiations.

    Long term · Assessed
First Reported In

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EUobserver· 8 Jun 2026
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