Europe | Charlemagne

Tariffs on Russian energy are a smart way to hobble Vladimir Putin

If Europe can’t agree to ban Russian oil and gas, it should tax it instead

THE INDUSTRIAL outskirts of Lubmin, a town on the windswept Baltic coast of what was once East Germany, feature in no tourist guide. Nor is the port of Rotterdam, the grittiest part of a city already struggling for charm, much of an attraction. Certainly neither has the appeal of Notre Dame or Venice, as Luis Garicano, an MEP, economics professor and recent day-tripper to both can attest. Yet few places could help a vacationer to Europe better make sense of what is actually happening there today. In the Dutch port, ships from Russia discreetly unload lakes of crude oil each worth up to $80m, to be processed in European refineries. Even further from the public gaze, the Nord Stream pipeline makes landfall at Lubmin, pumping Siberian gas for which customers in Germany and beyond send back over €160m ($174m) every day. This is the dark economic underbelly of Europe, a continent that congratulates itself on aiding Ukraine while having paid nearly €40bn for Russian energy since the war started eight weeks ago.

This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “If you can’t embargo it, tax it”

The Fed that failed

From the April 23rd 2022 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Europe

François Hollande hopes to make the French left electable again

The former president moves away from the radicals

Friedrich Merz

Germans are growing cold on the debt brake

Expect changes after the election


Pope Francis in Rome, Italy

The Pope and Italy’s prime minister tussle over Donald Trump

Giorgia Meloni was the only European leader at the inauguration


Europe faces a new age of gunboat digital diplomacy

Can the EU regulate Donald Trump’s big tech bros?

Ukrainian scientists are studying downed Russian missiles

And learning a lot about sanctions-busting