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EU Continues Buying Russian Arctic LNG Despite Looming Ban
By MGN Editorial•March 9, 2026 at 11:55 AM
Despite plans for a full EU ban on Russian LNG by 2024, European buyers purchased all cargoes from Russia's Yamal LNG project in February, highlighting a disconnect between policy and market realities.
In a surprising move, the European Union continued to purchase 100% of the liquefied natural gas (LNG) cargoes from Russia's Yamal LNG project in February, just nine months before a full EU ban on Russian LNG is scheduled to take effect, according to a report from gCaptain.
This highlights a stark disconnect between the EU's policy intentions and the current market realities. The bloc is planning to implement a complete ban on Russian LNG imports by 2024 as part of its efforts to reduce reliance on Russian energy following the invasion of Ukraine. However, the February data shows European buyers were still willing to purchase every cargo from the Yamal facility, one of Russia's largest LNG export projects.
'The data underscores the challenge policymakers face in weaning Europe off Russian energy, with market forces often at odds with political objectives,' gCaptain noted.
The Yamal LNG project is a joint venture between Russian gas giant Novatek, France's TotalEnergies, China's CNPC and the Silk Road Fund. It has been a key source of LNG for European countries, which have historically been major consumers of Russian gas.
The continued European purchases of Yamal LNG cargoes come despite the EU's plans to ban seaborne Russian oil imports by the end of 2022 and phase out Russian coal imports by August 2022. The bloc has struggled to find alternative suppliers to replace Russian energy sources, leading to concerns about potential supply shortages and price spikes.
As the EU works to implement its planned LNG ban, industry experts will be closely watching whether European buyers can truly wean themselves off Russian gas in the coming year, or if market forces continue to override political objectives.
#lng#russia#european union#sanctions#energy policy
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