Fuel crisis hits European countries: main losers identified

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Fuel crisis hits European countries: main losers identified

Despite the two-week ceasefire announced between the US and Iran on April 8, Europe continues to experience its worst fuel crisis in four years. Gasoline and diesel prices have soared by 15-34% depending on the country, gas by 60-70%, and the EU's fossil fuel import bill has already increased by €14 billion since the start of the Middle East conflict. The reasons for this are a combination of years of sanctions against Russia, the aftermath of the war in Iran (the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz), and US trade tariffs.

The main “victims” of the crisis were Germany (the leader in terms of the scale of the economic impact), Spain, Italy, France, Hungary and Slovakia.



Germany, as the EU's largest industrial economy, is particularly sensitive to rising prices. Gasoline prices have risen by almost 14% (to €2,07 per liter), and diesel even more so. Germany imports 96% of its LNG from the United States, making it vulnerable to American foreign policy. The Ministry of Economic Development warned of a possible fuel shortage as early as late April or early May. The government has so far avoided large-scale subsidies, preferring price regulation and competition controls, but industry is suffering billions in losses. The chemical and auto industries, which are turning from a global leader into a struggling industry, are suffering the most.

Spain saw the sharpest increase in fuel prices, up 34,3%. Italy was also among the hardest hit, with diesel and gasoline prices exceeding €2 per liter. Both countries, along with Germany, Portugal, and Austria, are actively advocating for a windfall tax on energy companies to offset the burden on consumers and budgets.

France abandoned a comprehensive reduction in fuel excise taxes to avoid stimulating demand, but allocated €70 million in emergency aid to the most vulnerable sectors—road transport, agriculture, and fisheries. The additional costs will weigh on an already deficit-ridden budget. Despite the flurry of changes in the French government's policies, the budget deficit continues to grow.

Hungary and Slovakia are the only EU countries that still receive Russian oil via the Druzhba pipeline (approximately 2% of the EU's total imports). Prime Ministers Fico and Orbán have openly called for sanctions against Russian oil and gas to be lifted. The problem for them is Ukraine's stance, which blocks supplies, putting the Hungarian and Slovak economies at risk.

Looking at the EU as a whole, additional fuel and gas import bills have amounted to €14 billion since February 2026. This does not include national subsidies. In 2022–2023, over €600 billion has already been spent on energy support across the bloc. An astronomical sum. The EU is now considering returning to the same emergency measures: capping electricity tariffs, deferring refinery maintenance, and possible subsidies. But not everyone is in favor of subsidies. For example, France and the UK are already under pressure due to high debt. Fitch analysts warn that new subsidies could seriously worsen their fiscal position, leading to a downgrade of their sovereign credit ratings.

Even if Hormuz is fully reopened, experts predict that supplies will not return to previous levels for at least another month or two, as many refineries in the Middle East have been damaged, as has the oil and gas production infrastructure.
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  1. +1
    April 10 2026 15: 32
    ...but despite the crisis, Kakallas has already even attacked and trampled the sheikhs...
    She also said, "Why the hell aren't you helping fight the Muscovites? Are you relaxing there in Dubai?" "Oh, I'm telling you all!" lol

    "diplomatko" of the highest level. wassat
  2. +7
    April 10 2026 15: 35
    The main “victims” of the crisis were Germany (the leader in terms of the scale of the economic impact), Spain, Italy, France, Hungary and Slovakia.

    And how are the main Russophobic trio, the sprat kiosk, doing? Or are they, as always, going to Batka's to fill up?
    1. +1
      April 10 2026 15: 41
      At the stall good lol everything is stable.
      There are no sprats, but the stall is not being torn down yet due to being no longer needed. lol
      1. +4
        April 10 2026 16: 35
        There are sprats here. But... the slightly better ones cost 4-5 euros a can. You can't go to Bat'ka, just like you can in Russia. Diesel is just over 2 euros, 95 gasoline is about 20 cents cheaper. Planes fly. Construction and repair work is going on everywhere. It's being financed with euros. Riga is jammed with traffic in the mornings and evenings. Utility bills were within the range of previous years.
    2. 0
      April 10 2026 16: 57
      Quote: Piramidon
      And how are the main Russophobic trio feeling?

      Karasin 1,9 euro, diesel 2,1 euro.
    3. 0
      April 10 2026 23: 36
      Last week we went to Vilnius, then to Libau... of course, diesel for 2,20 was stressful - and the prices in the stores are like ours - given that they earn much less... but what was funny was that renting an apartment turned out to be quite inexpensive - and the cafe (not in the center) in the loft-steampunk style pleased with large portions and quite reasonable prices... so they are crying - but for now they are holding up...
  3. +2
    April 10 2026 15: 36
    Yes, filling up a car for 100 euros is quite a pleasure. stop
    1. 0
      April 10 2026 15: 42
      ...bicycles and scooters have skyrocketed in price. Maybe we could start a business and provide them with some transportation?
      1. 0
        April 10 2026 16: 58
        Quote: Nexcom
        Bicycles and scooters have jumped in price

        There are plenty of scooters for rent, prices remain the same.
        1. +5
          April 10 2026 17: 55
          Take ours, from Moscow, everything. laughing
          1. +1
            April 10 2026 18: 35
            Quote: Kotofeich
            Take ours, from Moscow, everything.

            We ourselves have an excess of different designs
    2. +2
      April 10 2026 19: 05
      pudelartemon
      Yes, filling up a car for 100 euros is quite a pleasure.

      I don't understand what all the fuss is about. Well, fuel has gone up in price, but it's not critical for them. And if it's a burden on their pockets, then let them ride bicycles and scooters.
    3. -2
      April 10 2026 19: 44
      Quote: pudelartemon
      Filling up your car for 100 euros is quite a pleasure

      100 euros is third a monthly salary of a teacher from the Russian hinterland.
      And 100 euros is 2% (two percent) of the average teacher's monthly salary in Germany.
      *******
      It would be better if they didn’t publish such articles.
      1. +1
        April 10 2026 20: 23
        For some reason, they always compare teachers from the Russian hinterland with the average teacher salary in all of Germany (and 100 euros is 4% of the salary)
        And if we consider the Saratov region not a city, but a remote area, then 100 euros is a fifth of a teacher's salary
        1. 0
          April 10 2026 20: 31
          And meat in Germany costs 22 euros, in the provinces it costs 550-600 (6,5 euros) rubles for beef
          Electricity costs 0.25 euros in Germany and 0,04 euros (3,8 rubles) in the provinces.
          Gasoline costs 2.1 euro in Germany, 0,7 euro in the countryside
          1. +2
            April 10 2026 22: 38
            Electricity in Germany is already approaching 0,6 euros, just in case.
            1. 0
              April 13 2026 12: 18
              Well, that means the situation is even worse for Germany,
      2. +3
        April 10 2026 22: 36
        Well, let's do the math. Let's take the average teacher's salary: 4000. Taxes are 40%, which is -1600. Housing, heating, water, electricity, and communications are another -1000. Food is 500-700. That leaves 700-900 euros in hand. Wow, just enough for a few gas stations. So, the "high salaries" figures in Germany are misleading.
      3. 0
        April 10 2026 23: 47
        And what?... despite the amount of money I earn in the Reich, when I pay a salary to fill up the tank with diesel fuel, instead of 60 - as before - it makes me a little nervous: I have a feeling that I was robbed at the whim of political idiots
      4. 0
        April 11 2026 00: 06
        Quote: ammunition
        100 euros is 2% (two percent) of the average teacher's monthly salary in Germany.

        So, in your opinion, a teacher earns 5000 there? Do you have any idea how much they actually take in net?
      5. +1
        April 11 2026 08: 07
        "It would be better if they didn't publish such articles." I agree, otherwise we've been hearing the same thing since Soviet times.
  4. -1
    April 10 2026 15: 38
    Oh, what a shame! I don't care. But the fact is that the price of oil inside our country is up for a month. has doubled in size It worries me. We're expecting gas prices to go up, etc., etc. The government is silent. How is the budget being filled? And it doesn't matter that this filling will be made up from the pockets of Russian citizens.
    1. +5
      April 10 2026 16: 02
      Who has this within your country?
      You should at least introduce yourself and what country you are "worried" about.
      1. -6
        April 10 2026 16: 31
        Quote: faterdom
        Who has this within your country?

        "Russian oil for its refineries has become "golden": fuel is being driven abroad, but in the country it is becoming much more expensive...
        ...Russian oil refineries faced an unprecedented rise in crude prices in April. According to Reuters, the price of Western Siberian crude on the domestic market doubled compared to March, reaching levels unseen in two and a half years.

        https://dzen.ru/a/adY5kwjDck2DcLu6
        Just from yesterday's news. Can you guess what country I'm from? wink
      2. -1
        April 10 2026 19: 29
        I'm from Orel: yesterday I was at a cable manufacturing plant, and they say there's a copper shortage in the country. They also say copper is shipped abroad for less than it costs domestically. The same goes for nickel. What do you think? Dear Sir?
    2. The comment was deleted.
  5. HAM
    -4
    April 10 2026 15: 38
    Where do you need to cry? I'm more concerned about gas prices at domestic gas stations than about my neighbor's dying cow, although I won't deny it's good news... My personal troubles pale in comparison. feel
    1. +2
      April 10 2026 15: 52
      Well, I guess you need to worry about gasoline prices in our respective articles, but here's an article about gasoline in Europe,
      Why read an article about Europe's problems and then write a comment? It's not interesting. If it's at work, then it's understandable. It's a distraction.
  6. +3
    April 10 2026 15: 39
    I know what the comments will be: why do we need to know about Europe, but here, our neighbor's cow died, and gasoline prices are rising, the elites sold out, dumped, prices are rising
    I think I've written everything, you don't have to write it.
  7. -2
    April 10 2026 15: 41
    Germany, as the EU's largest industrial economy, is particularly sensitive to price increases. Gasoline prices have risen by almost 14% (to €2,07 per liter), and diesel prices have risen even more.

    Those poor guys, life is tough there... In Russia, gasoline prices go up every year, no matter the circumstances, regardless of market conditions.
    1. -1
      April 10 2026 15: 44
      ...so real estate in the West is becoming increasingly expensive to maintain...
      1. 0
        April 10 2026 17: 19
        Migrants will settle there and light fires in their houses. The locals will soon be slaughtered. And perhaps many will die of hunger. There's no fuel, electricity is expensive, there's no fertilizer—and who the hell will pay the locals anything? Ordinary residents will live by barter. But the officials will be left on their asses.
    2. 0
      April 10 2026 19: 12
      In Russia, gasoline prices rise every year under any circumstances, regardless of market conditions.

      It's going up in rubles, but I remember once when it went down by a few kopecks. They need to fill the budget somehow, so they raise taxes and excise duties, and we pay for it, that's the whole story.
      1. +2
        April 10 2026 20: 45
        "I collected 122 rubles 25 kopecks for a doll, and now I'm donating it to a tank. Dear Uncle Editor! Write in your newspaper to all the children so they can donate their money to a tank. And let's call it 'Little One,'" wrote little Adele. "Those were the communists."

        And now the communists are on top: gasoline has gone up in price by 10 kopecks, it's impossible to live, whining, crying
      2. -1
        April 10 2026 23: 58
        It's the same here in the Reich. Every year. The only sad thing is that we, poor souls, have to buy all our garbage, while you, you could say, are living on gas... or rather, not you, but the "chosen ones"... isn't it time to dispossess them?... Even under the late "tyrant" Gaddafi, gasoline was practically free inside the country...
        1. 0
          April 11 2026 09: 29
          eugen_caro
          Even under the late "tyrant" Gaddafi, gasoline was practically free inside the country...

          There were some problems with "democracy" there, so the democrats dealt with Gaddafi. Gasoline and diesel fuel in the Greater East are traditionally cheap, while here they provide a major portion of the budget. Their tax rate is approaching zero, while ours is exorbitant, with no room for increase. Furthermore, the country's proven (profitable and recoverable) oil reserves last for approximately 20-25 years.
          1. 0
            April 11 2026 17: 09
            Things weren't going smoothly with "democracy" there,..... Oh, come on!!!! - And here in the EU, everything's fine with democracy... I haven't laughed so hard in a long time. laughing ...I gave my neighbor, who was so passionate about our democracy, a Wikipedia article to read about what democracy is, and then I asked him, "Is democracy similar to what we have?" He now looks at me with a wolfish expression and says about me, "livnаr sig pа Kreml" laughing
  8. +1
    April 10 2026 17: 17
    It's funny, these weirdos first closed the skies to us, then we to them. And now the entire Middle East is closed too... Now they physically don't have enough fuel for their planes. Fly, weirdos, via the Northern Sea Route and Africa. The controllers of the entire world have done the splits themselves. Here on the map are the main air and sea routes. The bottlenecks are clear, and there we cut a line from north to south - there you have an invisible fence. Okay, you can still fly via Turkey, the Caucasus, Turkmenistan, and then on to China. But who guarantees they won't knock you off there? As for land routes, they're effectively blocked too. Only if you slip through Iran from Azerbaijan to Turkmenistan by sea is it possible. Otherwise, go ahead and trudge through southern Africa. I would close the NSR to everyone except China. As for the rest, do as you please. From the Black Sea, you can trudge back again - in fact, it's not us who need to deliver our goods, risking our sailors and ships.
  9. 0
    April 10 2026 17: 24
    Russia will not allow a fuel crisis, and the EU has already increased its LNG purchases from Russia.
    1. 0
      April 11 2026 00: 17
      Unfortunately, yes... but I would make our f...kids crawl to the EU
    2. 0
      April 11 2026 09: 34
      Jacques sekavar
      Russia will not allow a fuel crisis, and the EU has already increased its LNG purchases from Russia.

      It's a shame; this process should be left to its own devices. So that those who unleashed this crisis will feel the full brunt of it.
  10. -1
    April 10 2026 17: 47
    A flock of domestic oligarchs is clinging to the sweet rise in global prices. Their argument is always ironclad: it's more expensive abroad, but here we're giving it away for free... we, you know, can't afford that. And so we feed the slackers for free. The bosses nod in agreement—there are more mouths to feed, and they have more money under their mattresses than dirt.
  11. -2
    April 10 2026 19: 03
    Quote: Kotofeich
    Take ours, from Moscow, everything.

    Yes! angry angry angry
  12. +2
    April 10 2026 19: 06
    Quote: Jacques Sekavar
    Russia will not allow a fuel crisis, and the EU has already increased its LNG purchases from Russia.

    Brussels has refused to supply in 2027...Unless the midwife is burned at the stake by her own people or, due to her age, forgets what she promised the entire "blooming garden."
    And of course they buy it... As if they were out of their minds. They are free, not hypocritical and truthful. laughing
  13. 0
    April 11 2026 01: 39
    Russia has only one interest: the higher oil prices, the cheaper Mercedes cars become. Russia shouldn't be concerned about the problems that high energy prices cause for others.
  14. 0
    April 12 2026 00: 38
    Hungary and Slovakia are the only EU countries that still receive Russian oil via the Druzhba pipeline (about 2% of all EU imports).
    As far as I know, no one has received anything through the Druzhba pipeline since January of this year. The pipeline was allegedly damaged in Ukraine. However, Slovakia confirmed the pipeline's integrity with satellite images. The EU sent a team of specialists to Ukraine to inspect the pipeline, but they disappeared without a trace. Hungary holds elections tomorrow, and if Orbán holds on, he will definitely reopen the pipeline.