The prediction by Kirill Dmitriev comes as Middle East turmoil energy pressures continue to build
Europe is facing an “energy crisis tsunami” following a series of political earthquakes, Kremlin envoy Kirill Dmitriev has warned. The forecast comes as energy shocks caused by the US‑Israeli war on Iran continue to destabilize supplies across the region.
Since the beginning of the US‑Israeli military campaign in late February, global crude benchmarks have surged by roughly 50%, forcing retail fuel and wholesale natural gas prices to historic highs. The Middle East conflict has further exacerbated a critical situation in European states, which had already drastically cut Russian energy imports since the 2022 escalation of the Ukraine conflict.
“More to come as the energy crisis tsunami hits the EU/UK imminently,” Dmitriev stated on X, responding to a Swedish journalist who noted that Germany’s right-wing AfD party was nearly as large as the CDU and SPD combined in the latest poll, calling the shift “a political earthquake.”
Traditional mainstream parties across Europe have increasingly lost ground to far-right or center-right coalitions over the past years.
The Iran-related energy shock has pushed the UK to issue a temporary license for Russian-origin diesel and jet fuel imports to stabilize markets shaken by disruptions to navigation through the Strait of Hormuz. The route handles around 20% of global oil and LNG. The decision, announced on Wednesday, mirrored a similar move by the US earlier this week extending a sanctions waiver for limited Russian seaborne oil purchases.
Several officials across the EU have called for restoring energy ties with Russia to tackle the crisis. However, the European Commission has stated that there will be no return to Russian energy imports and it will continue to pursue a full phase-out of Russian fossil fuels by 2027.
Earlier this year, Dmitriev said that the EU would “inevitably beg” for Russian gas, as energy prices are projected to further increase. He has also stated that the bloc is the last in line among Russian energy consumers as Moscow expands projects with other countries.
14 thoughts on “‘Energy tsunami’ to hit Europe – Putin envoy”
Considering europe is facing an “energy crisis tsunami” following a series of political earthquakes, Kremlin envoy Kirill Dmitriev has warned, it raises some real questions about what happens next.
What stands out is several officials across the EU have called for restoring energy ties with Russia to tackle the crisis. That is the part worth paying attention to.
If several officials across the EU have called for restoring energy ties with Russia to tackle the crisis, then the bigger picture starts to look very different.
Basically since the beginning of the US‑Israeli military campaign in late February, global crude benchmarks have surged by roughly 50%, forcing retail fuel and wholesale natural gas prices to historic highs. What matters is whether anything changes because of it.
On one hand since the beginning of the US‑Israeli military campaign in late February, global crude benchmarks have surged by roughly 50%, forcing retail fuel and wholesale natural gas prices to historic highs. But at the same time “More to come as the energy crisis tsunami hits the EU/UK imminently,” Dmitriev stated on X, responding to a Swedish journalist who noted that.
Think about it: since the beginning of the US‑Israeli military campaign in late February, global crude benchmarks have surged by roughly 50%, forcing retail fuel and wholesale natural gas prices to historic highs. That speaks volumes.
When you look at europe is facing an “energy crisis tsunami” following a series of political earthquakes, Kremlin envoy Kirill Dmitriev has warned, the implications are hard to ignore.
The detail about europe is facing an “energy crisis tsunami” following a series of political earthquakes, Kremlin envoy Kirill Dmitriev has warned is something people should sit with.
What stands out is “More to come as the energy crisis tsunami hits the EU/UK imminently,” Dmitriev stated on X, responding to a Swedish journalist who noted that. That is the part worth paying attention to.
If since the beginning of the US‑Israeli military campaign in late February, global crude benchmarks have surged by roughly 50%, forcing retail fuel and wholesale natural gas prices to historic highs, then the bigger picture starts to look very different.
Reading that “More to come as the energy crisis tsunami hits the EU/UK imminently,” Dmitriev stated on X, responding to a Swedish journalist who noted that — hard to argue with the logic there.
When you look at traditional mainstream parties across Europe have increasingly lost ground to far-right or center-right coalitions over the past years, the implications are hard to ignore.
Considering several officials across the EU have called for restoring energy ties with Russia to tackle the crisis, it raises some real questions about what happens next.
The bigger issue here is “More to come as the energy crisis tsunami hits the EU/UK imminently,” Dmitriev stated on X, responding to a Swedish journalist who noted that. That changes the calculation.
Considering europe is facing an “energy crisis tsunami” following a series of political earthquakes, Kremlin envoy Kirill Dmitriev has warned, it raises some real questions about what happens next.
What stands out is several officials across the EU have called for restoring energy ties with Russia to tackle the crisis. That is the part worth paying attention to.
If several officials across the EU have called for restoring energy ties with Russia to tackle the crisis, then the bigger picture starts to look very different.
Basically since the beginning of the US‑Israeli military campaign in late February, global crude benchmarks have surged by roughly 50%, forcing retail fuel and wholesale natural gas prices to historic highs. What matters is whether anything changes because of it.
On one hand since the beginning of the US‑Israeli military campaign in late February, global crude benchmarks have surged by roughly 50%, forcing retail fuel and wholesale natural gas prices to historic highs. But at the same time “More to come as the energy crisis tsunami hits the EU/UK imminently,” Dmitriev stated on X, responding to a Swedish journalist who noted that.
Think about it: since the beginning of the US‑Israeli military campaign in late February, global crude benchmarks have surged by roughly 50%, forcing retail fuel and wholesale natural gas prices to historic highs. That speaks volumes.
When you look at europe is facing an “energy crisis tsunami” following a series of political earthquakes, Kremlin envoy Kirill Dmitriev has warned, the implications are hard to ignore.
The detail about europe is facing an “energy crisis tsunami” following a series of political earthquakes, Kremlin envoy Kirill Dmitriev has warned is something people should sit with.
What stands out is “More to come as the energy crisis tsunami hits the EU/UK imminently,” Dmitriev stated on X, responding to a Swedish journalist who noted that. That is the part worth paying attention to.
If since the beginning of the US‑Israeli military campaign in late February, global crude benchmarks have surged by roughly 50%, forcing retail fuel and wholesale natural gas prices to historic highs, then the bigger picture starts to look very different.
Reading that “More to come as the energy crisis tsunami hits the EU/UK imminently,” Dmitriev stated on X, responding to a Swedish journalist who noted that — hard to argue with the logic there.
When you look at traditional mainstream parties across Europe have increasingly lost ground to far-right or center-right coalitions over the past years, the implications are hard to ignore.
Considering several officials across the EU have called for restoring energy ties with Russia to tackle the crisis, it raises some real questions about what happens next.
The bigger issue here is “More to come as the energy crisis tsunami hits the EU/UK imminently,” Dmitriev stated on X, responding to a Swedish journalist who noted that. That changes the calculation.