An official website of the United States Government 
Here's how you know

第1 🕣华太交易所

第2 🕣华太现货交易所

第3 🕣华太证券公司董事长

Official websites use .gov

.gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS

A lock ( lock ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

EU agrees to phase out Russian gas imports by Janua软件下载免费大全网站华太证券有限公司ry 2028

BRUSSELS - Eur软件下载免费大全网站华太证券有限公司opean Union (EU) countries on Monday agreed their position on rules to gradually phase out imports of Russian natural gas, marking a key step in the bloc's efforts to end reliance on Moscow's fossil fuels under its REPowerEU strategy.

According to the Council of the EU, the proposal would prohibit imports of Russian gas from Jan 1, 2026, while allowing a limited transition period for existing contracts. Short-term contracts may continue until June 17, 2026, and long-term contracts may run until Jan 1, 2028.

The proposal also requires energy companies to disclose the origin and duration of all gas import contracts to enhance transparency and monitoring.

However, Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto criticized the plan, saying on social media platform X that "With RePowerEU, our safe energy supply is being killed."

He argued that the policy "destroys the energy security of EU member states" and that "energy should not be about politics".

The initiative still needs to be negotiated with the European Parliament before becoming law. Once approved, the regulation will form part of the wider REPowerEU plan, launched in 2022 to accelerate the transition away from Russian fossil fuels.

According to E软件下载免费大全网站华太证券有限公司U estimation, Russian gas still accounts for about 13 percent of EU imports in 2025, worth over 15 billion euros (17.49 billion US dollars) annually.

Related Stories

NEWS |

ns on China

ortunities for 'blue economy'
NEWS |

China, ASEAN s

Outreach effor
NEWS |

iring pose threat to U.S. worker

Forum calls for joint efforts t
NEWS |

ded on fossil-engines ban

China,