EU embargo on Russian coal comes into force
11 Aug 2022
European Union sanctions on Russian coal have come into
force.
The import ban on all forms of Russian coal was agreed in
April as part of the fifth package of sanctions against
Russia with 10 August marked as the end of the wind-down period for imports.
Coal was the first Russian energy source to be sanctioned
by the EU, with an oil embargo on Russian seaborne oil approved in June as part
of the sixth round of sanctions and due to come into force at the end of the
year.
EU member states spend a lot more on Russian oil and gas -- the latter of which
has not been sanctioned -- than on coal. The Commission said that the coal
embargo should result in a loss of revenue of about €8 billion for Russia while
data from the World Economic Forum show that the 27-country bloc spent €99 billion on Russian
energy imports last year.
A Beyond Coal tracker estimates
that the EU coughed up more than €45 billion and €32 billion on Russian oil and
gas respectively between 24 February, when Moscow launched its war against Ukraine,
and August 10. Meanwhile, it spent €2.8 billion on Russian coal.
Yet the energy crisis impacting Europe means that some member states including
Germany, Austria and the Netherlands have reverted to coal in order to save and
store gas before the winter.
This could have an impact on their ability to
respect the European Climate Law that sets the intermediate target of reducing
net greenhouse gas emissions by at least 55% by 2030, compared to 1990 levels
to get to carbon neutrality by 2050.