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.
