Skip to content

The EU to End All Russian Gas Imports by 2027

Spread the love

Crude Oil Production

The European Union will phase out all Russian oil imports by January 1, 2028. New contracts will be prohibited after January 2026; existing short-term contracts must cease by June 2026 and long-term contracts by January 2028. The EU still believes it can target 45% renewable energy by 2030 and reduce its reliance on fossil fuel entirely. These conditions are perfect for inflationary price spikes and bottlenecks leading to extreme volatility. Europe has dismantled its economy to support Ukraine.

Cutting Russian gas imports reroutes the flow of capital across Europe and the globe. Alternative sources must be developed, infrastructure must be built, and agreements must be implemented. Gaps will lead to serious volatility, but these bureaucrats have no understanding of the larger implications.

There is no concrete plan B. Europe is back and forth on whether it wants to rely on the US. The US itself was begging other nations for oil under the Biden Administration and is prone to massive shifts since the two party system has two drastically different views on energy. Norway has become the bloc’s top pipeline gas supplier and is expected to deliver 120 billion cubic meters annually through 2027. New LNG contracts exist with Qatar and African suppliers. The Trans Adriatic Pipeline (TAP) has been expanding to 20 bcm per year and runs through Bulgaria and Greece.

Moscow supplied the EU with 40% of all gas imports before the conflict began in 2022 and offered gas at a historically low price. Trade was beneficial to everyone involved before Brussels decided to engage in economic warfare through sanctions on behalf of a nation that is not in the union. The union now imports around 6% of its current oil supply from Russia, but is heavily relying on the US and Norway. The US is charging up to 25% more on average. Norway’s gas production is not sufficient enough to power all of Europe singlehandedly. Europe is consuming around 400-450 bcm annually while Norway is only producing around 120 bcm. The US is naturally a safer bet than the Middle East or Africa due to geopolitical woes, but again, Europe is paying a premium and politicians are not eager to rely on America.

From the perspective of the Economic Confidence Model (ECM), this announcement is a turning‑point signal. Structural shifts like this rarely unfold smoothly. They are the precursors to non‑linear movements in commodities, currencies, and equities. Markets will price in expectations, fears, and geopolitical risks long before the physical supply is affected.

Energy is power. Power drives capital. The EU successfully drove capital away by decimating its energy sector through Russia and net zero initiatives.