Bellona Nuclear Digest. November 2025
A monthly analytical review offering expert insight into key developments in nuclear policy, economics, safety, and technology related to the activities of Rosatom in Russia, Ukraine, and other countries
News
Publish date: 23/02/2024
Written by: Bellona
News
Bellona has joined a joint international appeal urging nations of the European Union and the G7 to choke Russian revenue streams from its vast exports of fossil fuels, which, despite Western sanctions, are still fattening Moscow’s war chest on the second anniversary of its invasion of Ukraine.
In solidarity with 290 other European, international and Ukrainian NGOs, Bellona says there is a clear need to ban Russian LNG exports and to close all loopholes in existing sanctions that allow Russia’s fossil fuels to slip into Europe’s energy stream.
Indeed, a Bellona analysis has found that EU countries have continued to actively import Russian fossil fuels throughout the war, placing the bloc among Russia’s biggest customers. Russia’s main gas producing giant Gazprom is also a major contributor of methane at its extraction points, contributing to ongoing warming of the planet, Bellona has reported.
In such circumstances, say the signatories of the letter, it’s clear that what Russia is making on its fossil fuel exports dwarfs the ever-dwindling support for Ukraine coming from the EU and the G7. It is therefore paramount to stop aiding Russia’s war complex through continued fossil fuel imports to the West.
In solidarity with the Ukrainian people, civil society groups demand the G7 and EU to:
A monthly analytical review offering expert insight into key developments in nuclear policy, economics, safety, and technology related to the activities of Rosatom in Russia, Ukraine, and other countries
For three years now, Bellona has continued its work in exile from Vilnius, sustaining and expanding its analysis despite war, repression, and the collapse of international cooperation with Russia in the environmental and nuclear fields
In this news digest, we monitor events that impact the environment in the Russian Arctic
For more than three decades, Russia has been burdened with the remains of the Soviet nuclear project: a vast, sprawling, largely invisible inheritance of contaminated territories, derelict facilities, spent nuclear fuel and radioactive waste