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Article

24 Feb 2025

Author:
Ajit Niranjan, The Guardian

EU spends more on Russian oil & gas than financial aid to Ukraine, according to new report

EU spends more on Russian oil and gas than financial aid to Ukraine – report, 24 February 2025

The EU is spending more money on Russian fossil fuels than on financial aid to Ukraine, a report marking the third anniversary of the invasion has found.

The EU bought €21.9bn (£18.1bn) of Russian oil and gas in the third year of the war, according to estimates from the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air (Crea), despite the efforts under way to kick the continent’s addiction to the fuels that fund Vladimir Putin’s war chest.

The amount is one-sixth greater than the €18.7bn the EU allocated to Ukraine in financial aid in 2024, according to a tracker from the Kiel Institute for the World Economy (IfW Kiel).

Vaibhav Raghunandan, an analyst at Crea and coauthor of the report, said: “Purchasing Russian fossil fuels is, quite plainly, akin to sending financial aid to the Kremlin and enabling its invasion. [It’s] a practice that must stop immediately to secure not just Ukraine’s future, but also Europe’s energy security”...

In the calendar year 2024, the EU spent 39% more on Russian fossil fuel imports than it set aside for Ukraine. The aid figure does not include military or humanitarian contributions...

The report also found Russia earned €242bn from global fossil fuel exports in the third year of its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, with revenues since the start of the war “now inching closer to the trillion figure” as the country adapts to sanctions.

Russia gets up to half of its tax revenues from the oil and gas sector and has sought to bypass sanctions by moving fuels on a “shadow fleet” of old and underinsured tankers. The obscure ships are responsible for transporting about one-third of its fossil fuel export revenues, according to Crea...

The Crea researchers estimated Russian fossil fuel revenues could fall 20% by beefing up existing sanctions and plugging gaps. The measures include closing a “refining loophole” through which Europe can buy Russian crude that has been processed in another country, and restricting gas flows through the Turkstream pipeline.

The report also called for a crackdown on liquefied natural gas (LNG). Europe has slashed its imports of piped Russian gas since the start of the Ukraine war but has sated some of its hunger for energy with shipments of super-chilled gas, including from Russia...