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European Energy Markets
26APR

Russian LNG ban lands 25 April, no replacement named

3 min read
21:29UTC

The EU Council's short-term contract ban removes roughly 17 bcm/yr of Russian LNG in ten days and no importer has publicly said where the volume will come from.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

The hardest EU energy-security cut of 2026 takes effect in ten days with no named substitute supply.

The EU Council's short-term contract ban on Russian LNG enters force on 25 April 2026, ten days from the 15 April print, removing approximately 17 bcm per year, around 13% of EU LNG imports across the first eleven months of 2025 1. Long-term contracts follow on 1 January 2027. Importers must operate under a prior-authorisation system requiring proof of non-Russian origin for every cargo, and member states must notify the Commission of remaining Russian gas contracts within one month of entry-into-force.

The distinction against the 27 March transshipment measure matters. That instrument covered re-export to non-EU destinations, not inbound volumes; Bruegel's dataset confirms it did not materially reduce Russian LNG arrivals at EU terminals . The new instrument is the first that actually blocks Russian LNG at the European border, and the supply arithmetic changes on day one rather than across a transition.

What is missing from every source reviewed is a named replacement. Ras Laffan force majeure remains in force , Atlantic cargo diversions to Asia are now close to a dozen , and record March 2026 volumes read as front-loading rather than a durable bridge 2. At March import patterns the cut displaces roughly 1.3 to 1.6 bcm each month; replacing that from US flexible supply requires winning cargoes on a JKM-TTF spread that has not widened.

For procurement desks the compliance load lands on the 25th and the origin-proof paperwork applies to every non-Russian cargo from the first day. Bruegel's refill estimate did not assume another 17 bcm/yr would be removed on top of an already difficult supply picture. Implementation is certain; the open question is which importer breaks cover first on where the volume will come from.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Russia has been one of Europe's biggest suppliers of liquefied natural gas, even after the 2022 Ukraine invasion. By early 2026, Russian LNG still made up about 13% of what Europe imported by ship. From 25 April 2026 the EU bans short-term and spot contracts for Russian LNG. Before a tanker can dock, importers will need to provide paperwork proving the cargo is not Russian. The problem is that no EU buyer has publicly announced a replacement supply source. The volume being cut, about 17 billion cubic metres per year, is roughly equivalent to all the gas Norway ships to Germany in a year. It is not a minor adjustment; it requires new suppliers, new ships, and new contracts, none of which have been signed.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The EU took three years after the February 2022 invasion to move from voluntary Russian LNG reduction targets to a binding short-term contract ban.

The delay reflects two structural constraints: first, several member states (Belgium, Spain, France) had signed long-term LNG offtake agreements directly with Novatek that were not expiring before 2026, creating legal exposure if the ban was applied retroactively to long-term contracts. The ban's scope is therefore limited to short-term and spot contracts.

Second, no replacement supply was contractually arranged before the ban was passed. Bruegel's estimate that Europe needs 180 additional cargoes versus last summer (ID:2363) is based on aggregate volumes; it does not address the specific contract structure (FOB versus DES, US terminal slots, regasification capacity bookings) needed to operationalise that volume. The ban passed the political test; it did not pass the supply-chain test.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Russian LNG re-labelling through Turkish or Indian intermediaries could make the ban largely symbolic for 3-6 months, as documented in the 2023 crude oil ban precedent.

  • Precedent

    If ACER's new REMIT reporting instruments (ID:2359) successfully close the origin-certification gap, the combination represents the first genuinely enforceable EU energy sanctions regime, with implications for future sanctions design.

First Reported In

Update #2 · TTF EUR 42 as Russian LNG ban enters range

Council of the European Union· 15 Apr 2026
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Different Perspectives
Hungary and Slovakia
Hungary and Slovakia
Named in ACER's derogation list as the two EU member states most dependent on TurkStream, Hungary and Slovakia face a binary regulatory path: grant derogations exempt them from REMIT standards at the Russian gas entry point from 5 August, or compliance requires a third-country cooperative step neither Russia nor Turkey has treaty-based reason to provide.
Asian LNG buyers (China, Japan, South Korea)
Asian LNG buyers (China, Japan, South Korea)
With JKM sitting USD 2.90-3.30/MMBtu above TTF and European buyers below the cargo-diversion breakeven by USD 0.95-1.25/MMBtu, flexible Atlantic LNG cargoes continue routing east. Asian buyers are the primary beneficiaries of any reopening dividend until the JKM-TTF spread compresses below the diversion threshold.
Iran / IRGC
Iran / IRGC
Iran converted Hormuz operational control into a codified permit system on 7 May, formalising the wartime gain through a named institution, the Persian Gulf Strait Authority, and fee-charging arrangements. TTF's non-reaction to both Project Freedom's launch and its 48-hour collapse confirms markets treat Iran's Hormuz position as structural, not temporary.
European Commission (DG Energy)
European Commission (DG Energy)
The Commission's AccelerateEU decision on 22 April, confirmed at the Cyprus summit, chose untargeted consumer relief over any storage injection mechanism. At 0.248 pp/day, that choice is producing the outcome Bruegel's model did not stress-test: the EUR 26bn bill may buy 73% rather than 80% without a pace instrument.
ACER
ACER
ACER's 6 May derogation opinions formalise the structural limit of EU network code enforcement: where Russian and Turkish TSOs are counterparties, EU standards bind only to the EU border, and Hungary and Slovakia bear the derogation exposure. The Commission, not ACER, holds the final decision on whether to grant the derogations ahead of 5 August.
Equinor
Equinor
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