MOSCOW, April 24 (Reuters) - New European Union sanctions will ban condensate imports from Yamal LNG and other Russian projects that ​produce the light fuel as a byproduct of ‌their liquefied natural gas production from January 1, 2027, according to the EU's official journal.

The European Union on Thursday formally approved a ​90-billion-euro ($105 billion) loan to Ukraine and new sanctions against Russia ​ahead of an informal summit of the bloc's leaders ⁠in Cyprus.

The EU is tightening sanctions against Russia ​over the war in Ukraine as U.S.-brokered peace talks have ​been paused, with Washington's focus on the war in Iran.

The EU has banned Russia's oil imports since December 2022 and subsequently introduced a ​price cap for Russian oil.

The bloc has almost fully ​ended Russian coal, crude oil and fuels imports. In 2021, it ‌imported ⁠43% of its fuels from Russia and 25% of its crude oil supply.

Russia produces gas condensate, a type of light oil, at its two LNG-producing projects: Yamal LNG ​and Arctic LNG-2.

The ​Yamal LNG ⁠plant in the Arctic exported 1.12 million tons of gas condensate to Rotterdam in ​the Netherlands in 2024, up 16.3% from ​2023.

Last year, ⁠the supplies rose by 7.4% to 1.2 million tons.

Gas condensate is used as feedstock for production of petrochemical products ⁠as ​well as motor fuel.

The EU initially ​excluded gas condensates from sanctions in 2022, citing the need to ensure ​security of LNG supplies.

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