As much as EU leaders may celebrate the agreement on the sixth sanctions package and the oil embargo.

The truth is that the days of big sanctions packages against Russia are over for the time being.

With the oil embargo, the EU has reached the point where the costs of a united EU action against the Russian aggressor are too high, at least for some states.

It's not just Hungary, which blocked the deal for almost four weeks - Germany only pushed the embargo after it had greatly reduced its dependence on Russian oil.

Henrik Kafsack

Business correspondent in Brussels.

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The result is an embargo with small and large holes.

The EU will end oil imports from Russia.

But that only applies to oil that arrives by tanker.

Hungary, Slovakia and the Czech Republic can continue to be supplied via the Druzhba pipeline.

Because Germany and Poland will no longer take oil from the northern arm of the pipeline, this will affect at least 90 percent of imports.

This hurts Russia, as it cannot easily sell the oil elsewhere, even if at discounted prices, since the package also includes a ban on reinsurance for Russian oil tankers.

The big flaw is that all of this will only really take effect from 2023.

Until then, Russian President Vladimir Putin can fill his pockets with billions in European oil.

Because prices are likely to rise, in the worst case this will even overcompensate for the negative effect of the embargo.

And in the meantime he can look around for new customers.

In addition, there is a risk that the cheap pipeline oil that Hungary, the Czech Republic and Slovakia will continue to receive will act as a rift in the EU – even if they are not allowed to resell it.

What is missing is an accompanying import duty.

With that, the EU could skim off part of the Russian profits and ensure that pipeline oil also becomes more expensive.

The charm is that the EU does not need an agreement for such a tariff, unlike for new sanctions packages.

Work on it must begin immediately.

Otherwise, the Europeans must now prepare for the fact that Putin will not simply accept the oil embargo and turn on the gas tap.