The Baltic states are pressing the European Union to speed up its planned ban on Russian oil imports, arguing that the current timeline for a full phase-out isn’t aggressive enough. The push came during an EU energy ministers’ meeting on June 26, with Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania making the case that cutting off Russian crude faster would both starve Moscow’s war machine and strengthen Europe’s energy sovereignty.
Russian oil accounted for 27% of EU imports at the start of 2022. By 2025, that figure was projected to fall to just 2%.
The EU’s REPowerEU strategy, launched in the wake of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, was designed to systematically sever Europe’s deep energy dependence on Moscow.
Czechia fully exited Russian oil imports by April 2025 following the completion of the TAL-PLUS pipeline project. That gave Prague an alternative supply route, eliminating its dependency on the Druzhba pipeline that had been pumping Russian crude into Central Europe since the Soviet era.
The official EU deadline for a complete oil phase-out remains the end of 2027, as outlined in the REPowerEU roadmap. The Baltic states want that moved up considerably.








