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Press release
16-10-2025
INTA
ITRE
Imports of Russian gas and oil to the EU: MEPs back ban [3]
Gradual ban on pipeline and liquefied natural gas imports from 2026
Oil and petroleum products also covered
Measures to counter circumvention, e.g. via shadow fleets
Draft legislation adopted on Thursday seeks to protect the Union’s interests from the weaponisation of energy supplies by the Russian Federation.
On Thursday, the Committees on Industry, Research and Energy and on International Trade approved draft plans to ban imports of Russian natural gas – both pipeline and liquefied natural gas (LNG) – from 1 January 2026, with limited exceptions for existing short-term contracts (until 17 June 2026) and long-term contracts (until 1 January 2027), provided they were concluded before 17 June 2025 and remain unamended.
Under the proposed rules, energy operators will be able to invoke “force majeure” to terminate Russian gas import contracts, since the legally-binding prohibition on further imports, as provided by this new regulation, is explicitly defined as a sovereign act beyond their control.
The MEPs propose to prohibit the temporary storage of Russian-origin natural gas in EU facilities as of 1 January 2026. Moreover, to close loopholes and mitigate risk of circumvention, operators would have to provide customs authorities with stricter and more detailed evidence of the gas’ country of production before import or storage, with prior authorisation required depending on the origin of the natural gas.
Ban on oil imports also from 2026*
>From the same date, the MEPs want to prohibit all imports of Russian oil, including petroleum products originating from Russian crude oil, while requiring prior customs authorisation and verification of the country of production for such imports.
Additionally, the text explicitly targets circumvention risks – such as re-labelled imports, shadow fleets, and transit via third countries – by mandating origin certification for oil pipelines, quarterly audits, and a list of high-risk LNG terminals, to be managed by the Commission.
Finally, the MEPs delete the review clause allowing the Commission to authorise a temporary suspension of the import ban in situations threatening EU energy security. They also strengthen its enforcement by introducing penalties for violations of the regulation.
Quotes*
“The vast majority of the members of the two committees have voted for a strong position to strengthen the exit from Russian fossil fuel imports. I am impressed by the shared understanding of the need for effective legislation that is not just banning imports of Russian gas and oil to the European Union but is also stringent in enforcement and closes the loopholes of the Commission’s proposal” said lead MEP for the Industry, Research and Energy Committee (ITRE), Ville Niinistö [4] (Greens/EFA, Finland).
“The almost unanimous support gives me a strong mandate for negotiations with the Council. The ban of Russian fossil fuels is a great achievement for the European Union and a turning point in European energy policy. We have strengthened the European Commission’s initial proposal by including oil and its products, ending long-term contracts a year earlier than proposed, adding penalties for non-compliance, and deleting exceptions for landlocked countries,” said Inese Vaidere [5] (EPP, Latvia), lead MEP for the International Trade Committee.
Next steps*
The legislation was adopted by 83 votes to 9, with 1 abstention. MEPs also voted by 84 votes to 7, with 1 abstention, to open negotiations with the Danish Presidency of the Council. Parliament’s plenary chamber will be notified of the decision during its forthcoming session of 20-24 October.
Background*
This legislation comes in response to Russia’s systematic weaponisation of energy supplies, a pattern documented over nearly two decades and escalating with the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022. The 2022 invasion came with further deliberate market manipulation, including Gazprom’s unprecedented underfilling of EU storage facilities and abrupt halts to pipelines, causing energy prices to spike to up to eight times their pre-crisis levels.
Further information
[6] scribo-webmail-arrow [17]
Meeting documents
[7] scribo-webmail-arrow [18]
Procedure file
[8] scribo-webmail-arrow [19]
EP Research Service: Phasing out Russian fossil fuel imports
Baptiste CHATAIN
Press Officer (FR)
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