# Russian Pipeline Gas
> The Gazprom-operated export pipeline network that once supplied 40% of EU gas, dismantled by Russia's 2022 Ukraine invasion and now banned under EU Regulation EU/261/2026.

**Meta:** type: reference · date: 2026-07-03 · heads:  · 5 takes · 4 lenses · 3 regions

## What it is

Russian pipeline gas is natural gas extracted primarily from western Siberian fields, chiefly
Urengoy, Yamburg, and Bovanenkovo, and transported to export markets via long-distance steel
pipelines operated by Gazprom, the Russian state-controlled gas company (the Russian government
holds 50.23% of Gazprom). The network historically ran on two axes: westward to Europe, where it
supplied roughly 40% of EU gas at peak, and, since 2019, eastward to China. Transit states held
structural leverage: Ukraine and Belarus earned hundreds of millions of euros per year in transit
fees and could, and did, interrupt flows during price disputes. That leverage model collapsed
after 2022.

## History

Soviet-era gas exports to Western Europe began in the late 1960s over short lines to Finland and
Austria. The Urengoy-Pomary-Uzhhorod pipeline, completed in 1984 and traversing Ukraine, opened
large-scale western trade and remained the backbone route for four decades. Yamal-Europe, running
via Belarus and Poland to Germany, reached full capacity of 33 billion cubic metres (bcm) per year
by 2006. Nord Stream 1, a direct Baltic Sea line bypassing transit countries, was commissioned in
2011 at 55 bcm/year; a twin line, Nord Stream 2, was built but never certified. TurkStream, a
31.5 bcm/year submarine route to Turkey and the Balkans, began deliveries in January 2020.
At peak in 2021, Gazprom sent roughly 150 bcm/year to Europe. Russia's February 2022 invasion of
Ukraine triggered a cascade of closures: Yamal-Europe flows via Poland halted in May 2022 after
EU sanctions; Nord Stream 1 was shut that July and physically destroyed in a still-unattributed
sabotage in September 2022, along with the completed-but-uncertified Nord Stream 2. Ukraine
declined to renew the transit agreement that expired on 1 January 2025, ending flows that had
carried 40-50 bcm/year westward.

## Current state

As of mid-2026, [TurkStream](/ja/n/turkstream-last-russian-route-2026) is the sole active Russian
pipeline corridor into the EU, serving Hungary, Serbia, and Slovakia via Turkey. A scheduled
maintenance shutdown from 2 to 10 June 2026 zeroed EU deliveries for eight days. Gazprom's total
European exports fell to approximately 18 bcm in 2025, the lowest level since 1973, down from
roughly 150 bcm in 2021. Russia's share of EU pipeline-gas imports fell from about 40% in 2021
to around 6% in 2025. On 26 January 2026, the EU Council adopted Regulation EU/261/2026, phasing
out all Russian pipeline gas and LNG: short-term contracts expired by mid-June 2026; long-term
TurkStream contracts must terminate by November 2027. On 24 June 2026, Ukrainian drones struck the
Orenburg Gas Processing Complex 1,500 km inside Russia (see [ウクライナ無人機、ロシア国内1500km地点のオレンブルクガス施設を攻撃し唯一のヘリウム工場を炎上させる](/ja/n/ukraine-orenburg-gas-strike-2026)),
damaging a facility that feeds the Orenburg-Novopskov line carrying Central Asian gas westward.
Russia's pivot to Asia is underway: Power of Siberia 1, connecting Siberian fields to northeast
China, delivered close to 39 bcm in 2025, above its nominal 38 bcm design capacity. Negotiations
on Power of Siberia 2, a planned 50 bcm/year route through Mongolia, remain stalled.

## Relationships

Gazprom's European gas revenues long subsidized the Russian federal budget; gas and oil together
once accounted for roughly 45% of Russian government revenues. The collapse of European volumes
has removed an estimated US$30-40 billion per year in hard-currency Gazprom earnings, compounding
Russia's fiscal pressure under sanctions. Turkey emerged as an unexpected gatekeeper, hosting
TurkStream's receiving terminals and collecting transit income while remaining outside EU sanctions.
China locked in Power of Siberia pricing reportedly below Russian domestic market rates, negotiated
while Russia faced Western isolation. Hungary and Slovakia, the EU states most dependent on
TurkStream volumes, have consistently resisted accelerated phase-out timelines inside the European
Council.

## What to watch

- Whether Hungary and Slovakia secure carve-outs in the November 2027 pipeline ban, or pivot to
  Azeri gas via the Southern Gas Corridor.
- A Power of Siberia 2 deal, which would give Gazprom a large new Asian volume outlet and alter
  Russia's fiscal calculus under sanctions.
- The duration and scope of Orenburg Complex outages after the June 2026 drone strikes, and
  whether Ukrainian operations expand to other compressor stations.
- Gazprom's long-term financial viability as European revenues contract and domestic gas
  investment needs widen.

## Regional takes (batched by bias / lens)

### country energy profile
- **U.S. Energy Information Administration** (United States, en) — EIA country analysis for Russia covering natural gas production (23.2 Tcf in 2024), export volumes by route, and pipeline infrastructure including Power of Siberia and TurkStream status.
  Source: https://www.eia.gov/international/content/analysis/countries_long/russia/

### official record
- **European Council** (European Union, en) — EU Council policy page on phasing out Russian energy, including the January 2026 adoption of Regulation EU/261/2026 banning pipeline gas and LNG with phased deadlines through November 2027.
  Source: https://www.consilium.europa.eu/en/policies/ending-russian-energy-imports/
- **European Council** (European Union, en) — Council press release of 26 January 2026 confirming adoption of EU/261/2026: short-term contracts banned by June 2026, long-term pipeline contracts by November 2027, with national diversification plans required.
  Source: https://www.consilium.europa.eu/en/press/press-releases/2026/01/26/russian-gas-imports-council-gives-final-greenlight-to-a-stepwise-ban/

### flow data
- **Bruegel** (European Union, en) — Weekly European natural gas import data by pipeline route (Nord Stream, Yamal, Ukraine transit, TurkStream), the primary public record of physical flows showing the collapse of Russian volumes since 2022.
  Source: https://www.bruegel.org/dataset/european-natural-gas-imports

### policy analysis
- **Oxford Institute for Energy Studies** (United Kingdom, en) — March 2025 paper assessing remaining Russian pipeline volumes in Europe, legal phase-out paths, and Gazprom's financial exposure as European export revenues collapse; foundational reference for the 2025-2027 transition.
  Source: https://www.oxfordenergy.org/wpcms/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/Insight-166-Russian-Pipeline-Gas-in-Europe.pdf

## Across the graph
- Related: [[turkstream-last-russian-route-2026]], [[ukraine-orenburg-gas-strike-2026]]
- Entities: Commodity:russian Pipeline Gas, Russia, Gazprom, European Union, China, Turkey

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