As well as sharing a long border with Ukraine and serving as a key part of NATO’s eastern flank, Romania may also become central to Europe’s push for greater gas independence.
The Black Sea Neptune Deep project is a major prize for the country. Owned equally by OMV Petrom and the state-owned Romgaz, it contains estimated reserves of roughly 100bn cubic meters of gas. That would cover Romania’s domestic consumption for around a decade.
Annual production from the two main confirmed fields, Domino and Pelican South, is expected to reach around eight billion cubic meters per year. The first gas is expected to reach customers within the next year. Romania is therefore set to strengthen its position as the largest gas producer in the European Union.
Although those volumes remain modest compared with the EU's total annual gas consumption of around 335bn cubic meters, Romania’s Black Sea reserves continue to attract attention. Infrastructure is already being expanded to support future discoveries, while further exploratory drilling in the smaller Anaconda and Cormoran West fields is expected within the next year.
The additional Romanian supply comes at a critical moment for Europe’s energy market. Qatari liquefied natural gas (LNG) shipments have fallen due to the conflict with Iran, while the EU is phasing out Russian gas imports entirely. The ban on Russian LNG will take effect in January 2027, while the final deadline to end pipeline gas imports is 1 November 2027.
Relentless Numbers
A blockade of the Strait of Hormuz could remove roughly 110bn cubic meters of gas, nearly one-fifth of the global LNG market, from international trade routes. Yet the Middle East conflict is only one factor tightening supply.
The EU’s upcoming ban on Russian LNG will remove an additional 20bn cubic meters from the European market. Russia may redirect some volumes elsewhere, but pipeline gas exports to Europe, currently just below 17bn cubic meters annually, face a more uncertain future.
Moscow may still channel part of this gas through Turkey, which could then export its own supplies onward to Europe. In practice, however, such arrangements are often largely commercial operations, with physical flows remaining unchanged. Some Russian volumes may therefore remain stranded, further reducing supply available to Europe.
Against this backdrop, Romanian gas represents a particularly important diversification option for landlocked EU members such as Hungary, Slovakia and Austria.
Rising Debt, High Prices and Weak Growth
Romania’s strategic importance is growing rapidly, driven by its location and energy resources. Economically, however, the country continues to struggle to fulfil its potential.
Inflation remains close to 10% annually, while economic output expanded by only around 0.7% last year. A similarly weak performance is expected this year.
Public finances have added further pressure. Romania recorded the largest budget deficit in the EU last year at 7.9% of GDP, marking the fourth consecutive year in which the deficit exceeded 6%.
Combined with sluggish economic growth, the deficit has sharply increased public debt. Romania’s debt burden now stands just below 60% of GDP, compared with 48.1% in 2022.
Short-Sighted Politics
Public finances have become the central challenge for Romania’s government, which had been in office for only 10 months.
Last year, Bucharest was forced to introduce austerity measures after the budget deficit reached 7.9%. The steps helped reduce the projected deficit to around 6.2% of GDP this year and prevented an immediate downgrade of Romania’s credit rating.
The country’s ratings remain within investment grade territory, but agencies continue to maintain a negative outlook. Romania is therefore still only one step away from slipping into speculative status.
Reducing such a large deficit was always likely to prove politically difficult. Tensions emerged within the governing coalition as further consolidation measures threatened the electoral support of its largest parties.
The Social Democrats ultimately refused to support additional unpopular cuts, withdrew from the four-party coalition and joined the right-wing opposition in backing a motion of no confidence against the government.
The motion passed comfortably on 5 May. Romania’s political future is now largely in the hands of President Nicusor Dan, who must appoint a new Prime Minister capable of securing parliamentary support for a fresh cabinet.
Romania’s Instability Risks Undermining Its Potential
Several scenarios remain possible. The former coalition could return with a different prime minister, while a technocratic government also remains under discussion. Early elections are still considered unlikely.
The change in leadership has increased investor concerns that Bucharest may weaken its commitment to deficit reduction. Although politicians have changed, the structural budget problem has not disappeared.
Failure to deliver reforms and fiscal consolidation could also jeopardize billions of euros in funding from the EU’s Recovery and Resilience Facility.
The government's collapse follows a deeply polarizing electoral cycle. Right-wing candidate Calin Georgescu initially won the presidential election at the end of 2024. However, on 6 December, Romania’s constitutional court annulled the first-round result after intelligence services alleged illegal Russian influence on the campaign.
The credibility of those allegations remains fiercely disputed. Critics argue that the ruling amounted to an attempt by the political establishment to eliminate an inconvenient candidate. Georgescu was later barred from running again, and Nicusor Dan ultimately won the repeat election in the second round.
Whatever the reality behind the political conflict, the contrast between Romania’s strategic potential and its chronic political instability continues to undermine confidence.
The Neptune Deep project itself does not currently appear threatened by the government’s collapse. Nevertheless, political instability may delay future investment decisions and slow the expansion of related infrastructure.