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After Trump pressure, EU aims to bring forward Russian LNG import ban

Simon Osuji by Simon Osuji
September 20, 2025
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After Trump pressure, EU aims to bring forward Russian LNG import ban
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The European Union plans to ban Russian LNG imports into the bloc a year earlier than envisaged as part of a 19th package of sanctions against Moscow, EU officials said on Friday, a change that follows pressure from U.S. President Donald Trump.

“The revenues from fossil fuels sustain Russia’s war economy. We want to cut these revenues,” said European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, as she announced the proposal, which requires unanimous approval from EU governments.

“So we are banning imports of Russian LNG into European markets. It is time to turn off the tap,” von der Leyen said.

An EU sanctions proposal kicks off intense discussions among the 27-member countries to reach an agreement. Russia-friendly governments in Hungary and Slovakia have held up previous packages before a compromise was finally reached.

Kaja Kallas, the EU’s foreign policy chief, said on X that the new proposal aimedn “to speed up the phase-out of Russian liquefied natural gas (to be complete) by 1 Jan 2027”.

The EU had previously planned a phase-out by January 1, 2028, but Trump has repeatedly urged the bloc to end Russian energy purchases faster before he does anything further to pressure Moscow.

PACKAGE ALSO TARGETS ‘SHADOW FLEET’ AND CRYPTO

Beyond LNG, or liquefied natural gas, the proposed sanctions would also target more of Russia’s shadow tanker fleet and cryptocurrency.

Von der Leyen and Kallas did not give full details of the new package, but officials said it would also target Russian and central Asian banks, Chinese refineries and special economic zones, a customs loophole used by Moscow to import dual-use goods for its military.

“We are now going after these who fuel Russia’s war, who purchase oil in breach of sanctions,” von der Leyen said. “We target refineries, oil traders, petrochemical companies in third countries including China.”

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said on Wednesday that any EU proposal to phase out Russian energy more quickly would not affect Russia and would not force it to change its position.

Trump is pressing Europe to play a more robust role in helping end Russia’s war in Ukraine, demanding it shoulder a greater burden of the cost of shoring up Ukraine’s military and do more to deprive Moscow of the energy revenues bankrolling its war economy.

The proposal risks compelling EU countries to cover any shortfalls in LNG supplies through purchases from the United States, increasing their energy dependency on the U.S. in an era when Washington is using trade tariffs as a policy tool.

“Trump’s pressure on Europe to move faster on banning Russian energy imports seems to have worked,” said Simone Tagliapietra, a senior fellow at think tank Bruegel.

“Anticipating the ban on Russian LNG imports to Jan 2027 means Europe will now quickly need to prepare alternatives – and U.S. supplies are of course at the top of the list.”

A European official said advancing the ban on Russian LNG became a “priority” after von der Leyen spoke with Trump this week.

Russia’s share in EU imports of LNG decreased to 14% in the second quarter of 2025 from 22% in the first quarter of 2021, according to Eurostat. Spain, Belgium, the Netherlands and France import Russian LNG. Gas piped via TurkStream goes to Slovakia, Hungary and Bulgaria.

Totalenergies CEO Patrick Pouyanne said last week that Russian gas was needed until the end of 2027, “then we can exit from that because we can source it from other places without impact on the price”.

(Reporting by Julia Payne, Lili Bayer, John Irish and Kate Abnett; Writing by Makini Brice, Richard Lough and Andrew Gray; Editing by Kirsten Donovan, Frances Kerry, Hugh Lawson and Sharon Singleton)



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