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Energy

REPowerEU roadmap

The roadmap is the EU’s strategy to remove Russian oil, gas and nuclear energy imports from EU markets in a gradual and coordinated way.

On 17 June 2025, the Commission adopted a legislative proposal to gradually phase out the import of Russian gas and oil by the end of 2027. The proposal has been sent to the European Parliament and Council of the EU for the co-decision legislative process.

Energy imports from Russia in 2024

52 bcm
gas to 10 EU countries
13 million tonnes
oil to 3 EU countries
2 800 tonnes
enriched uranium/fuel to 7 EU countries

Timing and measures

  1. 2027

    Target end of Russian gas imports to the EU

  2. end of 2025

    EU countries to submit national plans for the phase out of Russian gas

  3. end of 2025

    Provisions to phase out imports of Russian gas under new contracts and existing spot contracts

  4. 6 May 2025

The Commission will work hand in hand with EU countries to ensure that the EU-wide phase out of Russian energy imports will be gradual and well-coordinated across the Union. 

The roadmap (COM/2025/440) includes 9 actions and will be followed by legislative proposals in June 2025. Based on the roadmap, the Commission will propose that the phasing out of gas, under existing long-term or spot contracts, ends at the latest by 2027.

Action 1 - EU rules requiring buyers to disclose information on contracts for the import of Russian gas and regular information exchanges between customs authorities and relevant public authorities.

Action 2 – EU countries to plan and monitor the phase out of Russian gas through national plans with clear actions and timeline (submission by end 2025).

Action 3 - Provisions to ban imports of Russian gas under new contracts and existing spot contracts by the end of 2025 at the latest, and under existing long-term contracts, by the end of 2027 the latest.

Action 4 - Explore demand aggregation options and addressing remaining regulatory and market barriers for a better use of infrastructure.

Action 5 - Trade measures on Russian imports of enriched uranium to level the playing field and encourage political and business decisions to accelerate capacity building in EU's nuclear value chain and restrictions on new supply contracts co-signed by the Euratom Supply Agency concerning uranium, enriched uranium and other nuclear materials deriving from Russia.

Action 6 – EU countries to plan and monitor the phase out of Russian nuclear energy imports through national plans with clear actions and timeline within specific deadlines.

Action 7 - Proposal for a European Radioisotopes Valley Initiative. 

Action 8 – 2 EU countries to develop national phase-out plans with clear actions and timeline for replacing Russian oil by the end of 2027 (submission end 2025).

Action 9 - Continue imposing and enforcing sanctions on entities and vessels transporting oil suspected of illicit activities.

Importing gas from Russia is a security threat to Europe. This is why we are now proposing an EU ban on Russian gas imports. This will increase our energy independence while also reducing the revenues Putin uses to finance his war. The Commission will work hand in hand with all Member States, especially those that may face challenges because of this. No Member State will be left without energy as a result of this proposal.

Dan Jørgensen, Commissioner for Energy and Housing, 17 June 2025

Background

Within 2 weeks of the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, the Commission published the Communication 'REPowerEU: Joint EU action for more affordable, secure and sustainable energy'. It outlined the EU's commitment to phase out our dependency on Russian energy imports, listing a series of measures to achieve this goal.

The Communication was embraced by EU leaders as part of the ‘Versailles declaration’, in March 2022.

The REPowerEU plan, published on 18 May 2022, presented a set of actions and resources aimed at achieving the goals outlined in the preceding communication. It was designed to effectively address and fulfil the goals of the previous communication through the 3 key objectives: promoting energy conservation, encouraging clean energy production and diversifying the energy supplies.

Effective as of 1 March 2023, Regulation 2023/435 mandates that EU countries integrate a dedicated REPowerEU chapter into their Recovery and Resilience Plans, covering energy-related reforms and investments.

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