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‘More damage to us than them’; Germany resists EU ban on Russia’s gas as new sanctions prepared over Ukraine war

  • Finance Minister Christian Lindner says Germany must end economic ties with Moscow but substituting gas would hurt the country more than Russia in short term
  • Rather than ban all energy imports from Russia, he suggests EU look separately at oil, coal, gas, with new suppliers found at varying speeds

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The flame on a burning gas hob. Germany, which relies heavily on Russian gas, has major concerns over securing supplies during Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine. Photo: AFP

German Finance Minister Christian Lindner on Monday rejected a European Union embargo on Russian gas imports as mounting civilian deaths in Ukraine increase pressure on the bloc to impose sanctions on Russia’s energy sector.

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“We are dealing with a criminal war,” Lindner said before talks with his EU colleagues in Brussels. “It is clear we must end as quickly as possible all economic ties to Russia. We must plan tough sanctions, but gas cannot be substituted in the short term. We would inflict more damage on ourselves than on them.”

Lindner suggested that instead of a general ban on all energy imports from Russia, the EU could look separately at oil, coal and gas, as alternative suppliers for each of the fossil fuels could be found at varying speeds.

A damaged car and buildings in Kharkiv, Ukraine, on Monday. Photo: Reuters
A damaged car and buildings in Kharkiv, Ukraine, on Monday. Photo: Reuters

After years of prospering from Russian energy imports, Germany is convulsed by a debate over how to unwind a business relationship that critics say is financing Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Russia supplies 40 per cent of Europe’s gas needs.

Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s governing coalition appears at odds over a ban on Russian energy imports and pressure is mounting on European leaders to impose more punitive sanctions on President Vladimir Putin’s government in the face of mounting evidence of atrocities against Ukrainian civilians by the Russian army.

Defence Minister Christine Lambrecht said on Sunday that the European Union must discuss banning the import of Russian gas after Ukrainian and European officials accused Russian forces of committing atrocities near Kyiv, raising hopes that Germany was rethinking its opposition to a ban.

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky surrounded by Ukrainian servicemen in Bucha, outside Kyiv, on Monday. Photo: Reuters
Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky surrounded by Ukrainian servicemen in Bucha, outside Kyiv, on Monday. Photo: Reuters

Economy Minister Robert Habeck said he opposes an immediate ban on Russian fossil fuel imports.

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