

As of 21 January 2026, by way of Article 3ma of Council Regulation (EU) No 833/2014 of 31 July 2014 (Regulation), the EU has prohibited the purchase, import or transfer into the European Union of petroleum products from third countries which contain Russian crude oil.
Article 3ma
Article 3ma provides as follows:
For the purposes of the application of this paragraph, at the moment of importation, importers shall provide evidence of the country of origin of the crude oil used for the refining of the product in a third country unless the product is imported from a partner country listed in Annex LI.
Petroleum products imported from third countries which were net exporters of crude oil in the previous calendar year shall be considered to have been obtained from domestic crude oil and not from crude oil originating in Russia, unless a competent authority has reasonable grounds to believe that they have been obtained from Russian crude oil.
Article 3ma was adopted on 18 July 2025 as part of the EU’s 18th package of sanctions against Russia. In introducing the prohibition, the EU stated that this is a clampdown on refined product imports made from Russian crude that are processed abroad and delivered into the EU and will prevent Russian crude oil from reaching the EU market in any form.
The position going forward
Refined petroleum products will now be dealt with, as follows:
For example, where the net exporter country is, e.g. the UAE, evidence will need to be obtained confirming that the oil originates from the UAE.
Question 4 of Section E7 of the EU’s Consolidated FAQs sets out a list of net-exporter countries of crude oil for 2024. The FAQs state that the table will be updated once a year in order to establish the list based on the previous calendar year.
The EU has stated that for these countries, the petroleum products benefit from a presumption that they have been made from crude oil produced in the country. Further, that it is sufficient that the importer provides evidence of the origin of the petroleum product itself (from a net exporter of crude oil), without having to provide evidence of the origin of the upstream crude oil.
Article 3ma only applies to imports into the EU. Refined petroleum products containing Russian crude oil will still be permitted entry into non-EU countries, including the transfer of such products to third countries by EU operators.
Further, Article 3ma only applies to petroleum products classified as CN Code 2710, which are produced using Russian origin crude oil (CN Code 2709 00). For example, products classified under CN code 2707 which are produced in third countries using Russian origin crude oil can still be imported into the EU, subject to such trade complying with other applicable sanctions laws.
What evidence is required
As matters stand, the EU has not provided guidance as to what exact “evidence” is required in scenarios (iii) and (iv) above. The EU has simply stated that operators should have in place adequate due diligence procedures to ensure that no Russian crude oil falling under CN code 2709 00 was used in the production of petroleum products falling under CN code 2710 imported into the EU.
That said, the EU has commented as follows at question 1 of Section E7 of its Consolidated FAQs:
Comment
In summary, this ban essentially puts a stop to Russian crude oil being used to produce petroleum products with cargo code 2710 which are intended for the EU.
The places an additional onus on owners/importers to evidence the origin of the crude content contained in refined petroleum products.
We expect that the EU will issue further guidance on this, in the form of its FAQs, in due course.
Source: Hill Dickinson