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3 Feb, 2026 10:55

Hungary sues EU over Russian energy ban

The bloc’s restriction on natural gas imports raises costs and violates its own treaties, Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto has said
Hungary sues EU over Russian energy ban

Hungary has filed a lawsuit with the EU’s top court seeking to annul a ban on Russian energy supplies to the bloc, Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto has announced.

The EU Council last month approved a plan to phase out Russian gas imports by 2028, requiring short-term contracts to end within six months and all remaining pipeline and LNG supplies to stop by the end of 2027.

Several member states criticized the move, warning it would push up prices and threaten energy security. Hungary and Slovakia in particular have refused to support the initiative.

Announcing the legal action on X on Monday, Szijjarto said Hungary would “challenge the REPowerEU regulation banning the import of Russian energy and request its annulment.”

The diplomat said the lawsuit was based on three main arguments, including that restrictions on energy imports can only be imposed through sanctions requiring unanimous approval. The EU had been aware of objections from Hungary and Slovakia, Szijjarto said, but still adopted the measure “under the guise of a trade policy.”

He stressed that EU treaties make clear that each member state decides its own energy sources and suppliers. The regulation also breached the principle of energy solidarity, he stressed, adding the decision “clearly violates” this in Hungary’s case.

Warning of the impact on supply and prices, Szijjarto said only “more expensive and less reliable alternatives” were available and that “without Russian oil and gas, our energy security cannot be guaranteed,” nor could low energy costs be maintained for Hungarian families.

The trial could last “about one and three-quarters to two years” and “must be brought to a conclusion,” Szijjarto said, adding that the current ruling party in Hungary would likely need to win the next elections to succeed.

He also accused “experts from the international energy world” of pushing Hungary to abandon cheap Russian energy for more expensive US supplies. The EU has become increasingly dependent on American natural gas, which is set to account for nearly half of the bloc’s supply by 2030, according to various estimates.

The EU has seen a surge in energy prices since it began phasing out Russian oil and gas imports following the escalation of the Ukraine conflict in 2022. Moscow says Western nations are hurting their own economies by choosing costlier and less reliable alternatives.

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