Russian gas imports to the EU jump by 18% in 2024, despite plan for 2027 phase-out | Ember

Russian gas imports to the EU jump by 18% in 2024, despite plan for 2027 phase-out

27 Mar 2025

Security of supply from foreign sources beyond Russia has also become increasingly volatile. Heightened geopolitical tensions increase the risk of relying on US supply, even as the US is boosting LNG export capacity. While the EU has suggested plans to fund foreign LNG infrastructure and sign long term LNG contracts as a way to wean off Russian gas, this would embed further gas dependence on potentially unreliable actors.

Rise in imports and gas lock-in puts EU plans at risk

The rise in Russian gas imports was despite the European Commission’s stated intention to end dependence on Russian fossil fuels by 2027. The EU still lacks a legally binding target or a published plan for phase-out. Member States can still import Russian gas through various loopholes even where restrictions are in place, such as the use of shadow vessels or by purchasing indirectly

The wider dash for alternative gas suppliers also conflicts with the EU’s plans, risking higher costs long term for households and industry. The recent Action Plan for Affordable Energy underlined the need to lower gas dependence to meet security and affordability objectives.

It is a scandal that the EU is still importing Russian gas. Instead of investing in true alternatives like renewables and efficiency to cut off Russian imports, Member States are burning money with expensive LNG capacity that won’t even be used.

It is vital for the EU to maintain consistent strategic leadership, instead of proposing short-term actions that work against its own long-term goals. Ideas such as subsidizing volatile imported gas or reopening the Nord Stream pipeline to improve energy affordability are like adding fuel to the fire and expecting it to go out.

The EU needs to stop dragging its feet and act immediately to implement legally binding measures—not empty promises—to set a clear timeline for ending Russian gas imports. To break free from Russian gas and constrain the Kremlin’s war-chest, the EU should enforce an LNG price cap, ban spot market purchases, and stay firm on a full gas phase-out by 2027. Without policies to restrict the flow of Russian gas into Member States, the EU risks increasing its reliance on this volatile supplier in 2025—just as it did with an 18% rise last year. Reliance on Russian gas exposes Europeans to price volatility, energy blackmail, and undermines support for its allies in Ukraine.

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Ember is an independent energy think tank that aims to accelerate the clean energy transition with data and policy. It creates targeted data insights to advance policies that urgently shift the world to a clean, electrified energy future.

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