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EU defers April 15 proposal of permanent ban on Russian oil imports

A revised EU legislative agenda revealed on Tuesday that the 'European Commission' will not submit its?legal? proposal to ban Russian oil imports permanently due to Moscow’s war in Ukraine as planned on April 15.

A spokesperson for the EU said that the proposal was not cancelled, but would no longer be published by mid-April due to the "current geopolitical developments".

According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), the U.S. and Israeli war against Iran has caused the largest oil supply disruptions in history. This has sent global crude prices soaring.

The proposal would put into law the complete phase-out of?Russian oil imports no later than 2027. The European Union already legislated the phase-out of Russian gas imports by the end of 2027.

If sanctions against Russia are lifted, the proposal would keep the ban in place.

The measure will have little impact on the 'physical supply,' since the EU is only importing 1% of their oil from Russia in the last quarter of 2025. This was after the EU has reduced its imports following Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.

Brussels wants to include a phase-out of Russian crude oil in legislation, which would continue to be in force even if the EU lifted sanctions following a peace agreement in the Ukraine?war.

EU sanctions against seaborne Russian crude oil have eliminated the majority of imports. By January 27, Hungary and Slovakia were still the only two EU countries importing Russian crude oil. Kyiv claimed that a Russian drone attack had hit pipeline equipment in Ukraine disrupting Russian oil deliveries. Budapest and Bratislava accuse Ukraine of intentionally delaying the return of oil shipments. This has triggered a political dispute, which saw Hungary block an EU loan to Kyiv.

The original April 15 date was chosen because it would have been three days after the Hungarian parliamentary elections. Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban is opposed to any ban.

Ursula von der Leyen, President of the European Commission, said in a statement this month that a return to Russian energy was "a strategic mistake" and would make Europe more susceptible. (Reporting and editing by Inti landauro, Joe Bavier, and Kate Abnett)

(source: Reuters)