Reed Smith In-depth

Key takeaways

  • Those involved in activities relating to Russian LNG that enters EU territory should seek advice on the impacts of the new restrictions on the performance of their contracts.
  • Russian LNG remains permitted to be imported into the EU via LNG terminals that are connected to the interconnected natural gas network.
  • We summarised the other sanctions restrictions introduced by the 14th sanctions package here.

EU sanctions on Russian gas and LNG to date

On 24 June 2024, the EU approved its 14th package of sanctions against Russia introducing the first sanctions against Russian liquefied natural gas (LNG). Natural gas and LNG from Russia have not been addressed in the EU’s previous 13 sanctions packages since Russia invaded Ukraine. The EU’s 27 member states voting as a bloc in relation to the import of Russian natural gas (by pipeline) and LNG (by seafaring vessels) has been difficult due to the differing levels of dependency on Russian gas and LNG for energy security across member states, and the different geo-political relationships between Russia and individual member states. Faced with these challenges, some EU member states (typically those less reliant on Russian LNG and natural gas) have imposed “self-sanctioning” measures, including a prohibition on the import of Russian LNG into that member state. The UK, for example, banned the import of Russian LNG from 1 January 2023, while the United States has had an import ban in place since 22 April 2022.

This article addresses the key measures in the sanctions on Russian LNG and their likely effect.