Serbia negotiates gas deal with Gazprom at competitive European price

Belgrade is currently finalising a new gas contract with Russia, promising Europe's lowest tariff, according to Srbijagas General Director Dusan Bajatovic, despite Europe's aim to eliminate Russian imports by 2027.

Share:

Comprehensive energy news coverage, updated nonstop

Annual subscription

8.25€/month*

*billed annually at 99€/year for the first year then 149,00€/year ​

Unlimited access • Archives included • Professional invoice

OTHER ACCESS OPTIONS

Monthly subscription

Unlimited access • Archives included

5.2€/month*
then 14.90€ per month thereafter

FREE ACCOUNT

3 articles offered per month

FREE

*Prices are excluding VAT, which may vary depending on your location or professional status

Since 2021: 35,000 articles • 150+ analyses per week

Serbia, one of the few European countries maintaining significant gas contracts with Russia, is planning a new supply agreement with Gazprom, scheduled to start in September. Dusan Bajatovic, General Director of Serbia’s state-owned company Srbijagas, stated that this contract would offer the “best price in Europe,” while refraining from specifying the exact rate due to ongoing commercial discussions.

European energy context

Serbia annually consumes approximately 3 billion cubic metres of Russian gas. Although the European Union (EU) is currently proposing a total ban on Russian natural gas imports, including liquefied natural gas (LNG), by the end of 2027, Serbia continues its commercial exchanges with Gazprom.

Serbia’s energy dependency relationship with Russia comes amid a tense European context, where most nations are actively seeking to diversify their supply sources. The EU’s recent proposal is legally binding for all potential members, including candidate countries such as Serbia.

Duration of the future contract

The upcoming agreement could last from three to ten years, depending on terms still under negotiation. This strategic timeline coincides with a critical period for the region’s energy future, marked by heightened political tensions around hydrocarbon supplies and energy diversification.

According to Bajatovic, Europe’s dependency on Russian gas is economically unavoidable: “It’s mathematical. You can’t solve the equation of European gas supplies at acceptable rates without Russian gas,” he explained during the International Economic Forum in Saint Petersburg.

Global gas market outlook

The Srbijagas General Director also highlighted that the future of the global gas market would primarily be shaped by Russia and the United States as major producers, along with China as a key consumer. In his view, Europe will inevitably have to accommodate this economic reality.

Moreover, Bajatovic expressed support for a potential takeover of the Nord Stream pipeline by American investors. The pipeline, connecting Russia to Germany under the Baltic Sea, was severely damaged by explosions in 2022, halting all deliveries since that date.

Thus, Serbia continues to rely on a strong energy partnership with Russia, while simultaneously facing European energy directives, in a context where national economic interests significantly influence forthcoming strategic decisions.

Venezuela has ended all energy cooperation with Trinidad and Tobago after the seizure of an oil tanker carrying crude by the United States, accusing the archipelago of participating in the military operation in the Caribbean.
National Fuel has secured $350mn in a private placement of common stock with accredited investors to support the acquisition of CenterPoint’s regulated gas business in Ohio.
GTT appoints François Michel as CEO starting January 5, separating governance roles after strong revenue and profit growth in 2024.
The United States is requesting a derogation from EU methane rules, citing the Union’s energy security needs and the technical limits of its liquefied natural gas export model.
Falcon Oil & Gas and its partner Tamboran have completed stimulation of the SS2-1H horizontal well in the Beetaloo Sub-basin, a key step ahead of initial production tests expected in early 2026.
Gasunie Netherlands and Gasunie Germany have selected six industrial suppliers under a European tender to supply pipelines for future natural gas, hydrogen and CO₂ networks.
The ban on Russian liquefied natural gas requires a legal re-evaluation of LNG contracts, where force majeure, change-in-law and logistical restrictions are now major sources of disputes and contractual repricing.
The US House adopts a reform that weakens state veto power over gas pipeline projects by strengthening the federal role of FERC and accelerating environmental permitting.
Morocco plans to commission its first liquefied natural gas terminal in Nador by 2027, built around a floating unit designed to strengthen national import capacity.
An explosion on December 10 on the Escravos–Lagos pipeline forced NNPC to suspend operations, disrupting a crucial network supplying gas to power stations in southwestern Nigeria.
At an international forum, Turkmenistan hosted several regional leaders to discuss commercial cooperation, with a strong focus on gas and alternative export corridors.
The Australian government has launched the opening of five offshore gas exploration blocks in the Otway Basin, highlighting a clear priority for southeast supply security amid risks of shortages by 2028, despite an ambitious official climate policy.
BlackRock sold 7.1% of Spanish company Naturgy for €1.7bn ($1.99bn) through an accelerated bookbuild managed by JPMorgan, reducing its stake to 11.42%.
The British company begins the initial production phase of Morocco's Tendrara gas field, activating a ten-year contract with Afriquia Gaz amid phased technical investments.
The Energy Information Administration revises its gas price estimates upward for late 2025 and early 2026, in response to strong consumption linked to a December cold snap.
Venture Global denies Shell’s claims of fraud in an LNG cargo arbitration and accuses the oil major of breaching arbitration confidentiality.
The Valera LNG carrier delivered a shipment of liquefied natural gas (LNG) from Portovaya, establishing a new energy route between Russia and China outside Western regulatory reach.
South Stream Transport B.V., operator of the offshore section of the TurkStream pipeline, has moved its headquarters from Rotterdam to Budapest to protect itself from further legal seizures amid ongoing sanctions and disputes linked to Ukraine.
US LNG exports are increasingly bypassing the Panama Canal in favour of Europe, seen as a more attractive market than Asia in terms of pricing, liquidity and logistical reliability.
McDermott has secured a major engineering, procurement, construction, installation and commissioning contract for a strategic subsea gas development offshore Brunei, strengthening its presence in the Asia-Pacific region.

All the latest energy news, all the time

Annual subscription

8.25€/month*

*billed annually at 99€/year for the first year then 149,00€/year ​

Unlimited access - Archives included - Pro invoice

Monthly subscription

Unlimited access • Archives included

5.2€/month*
then 14.90€ per month thereafter

*Prices shown are exclusive of VAT, which may vary according to your location or professional status.

Since 2021: 30,000 articles - +150 analyses/week.