Oil sees muted spike on EU import ban
The immediate impact of an official EU embargo on Russian crude and products may be outweighed by a longer-term reaction
The Brent crude benchmark was up by less than 4pc in early Wednesday afternoon trading, at just shy of $109/bl, despite the European Commission proposing a ban on Russian crude and products imports by the end of the year. But, while a combination of nagging doubts about Chinese demand, lack of clarity on potential carveouts from the ban and little trader appetite to take directional price punts may have dampened the immediate impact, analysts warn of longer-term bullishness. “In the last sanctions package, we started with coal; today, we are addressing our dependency on Russian oil,” says Commission president Ursula von der Leyen. “Let us be clear: it will not be easy, because some member st
Also in this section
10 March 2026
By shutting the Strait of Hormuz, Iran has cut exports of distillate-rich Middle Eastern crude, jet fuel and diesel, and is holding the energy market hostage
10 March 2026
Eni’s director for global gas and LNG portfolio, Cristian Signoretto, discusses how demand will respond to rising LNG supply, and how the company is expanding its own gas and LNG operations through disciplined, capital-efficient investments
9 March 2026
Petroleum Economist analysis sees increases in output from Saudi Arabia, Venezuela and Kazakhstan among others before region’s murky descent
9 March 2026
Energy sanctions are becoming an increasingly prominent tool of US foreign policy, with the country’s growth in oil and gas production allowing it to impose pressure on rivals without jeopardising its own energy security or that of its allies, argues Matthew McManus, a visiting fellow at the National Center for Energy Analytics






