EU trade with Russia has been strongly affected by import and export restrictions imposed by the EU following Russia's invasion of Ukraine.  

Both exports and imports have dropped considerably below the level prior to the invasion. Seasonally adjusted values show that Russia’s share in extra-EU imports fell from 9.6% in February 2022 to 1.7% in June 2023, while the share of extra-EU exports fell from 3.8 % to 1.4% in the same period. 

Line chart: EU trade in goods with Russia, January 2021 - June 2023, a share in extra-EU trade

Source dataset: ext_st_eu27_2020sitc

In March 2022, the month following the invasion, the EU experienced a peak trade deficit with Russia caused by high prices of energy products. The deficit amounted to €18.5 billion. This deficit was brought down to €0.4 billion by June 2023, remaining under one billion four months in a row in 2023 (€0.1 in March, €0.8 in April and €0.4 in May). The change was heavily influenced by the €18.6 billion drop in the monthly value of imports from Russia between March 2022 (€21.9 billion) and June 2023 (€3.3 billion).  At the same time, the value of exports decreased from €3.4 billion in March 2022 to €2.9 billion in June 2023.

EU-Russia trade deficit in energy sees a substantial decline

Looking at the quarterly data, in the second quarter of 2023, the EU-Russia trade balance for goods registered a deficit of €1.6 billion, indicating a great improvement from the €45.0 billion deficit observed in the second quarter of 2022. This substantial deficit decrease can be largely attributed to the decline in energy imports from Russia. The trade deficit in energy has been reduced from €40.4 billion in the second quarter of 2022 to €5.7 billion in the second quarter of 2023.
  

Bar chart: EU-Russia trade balance by product group, Q1 2019 - Q2 2023, in € billion

Source dataset: ext_st_eu27_2020sitc

Over the past two years, the EU’s reliance on energy imports from Russia has seen a noticeable decline. Specifically, shares of fossil fuels such as coal, natural gas, and petroleum oil imported from Russia have substantially decreased. Comparing the second quarter of 2021  with the second quarter of 2023, petroleum dropped 27 percentage points (pp) (from 29.2% in 2021 to 2.3% in 2023), natural gas 26 pp (from 38.5% to 12.9%), and coal 45 pp (from 45.0% to 0%).