Reuters reported this on August 25, 2022.
For The Hague, this means it has to find a new supplier of gas to replace its existing agreement with Gazprom.
The city said it held an EU-wide tender in June and July, but failed to attract any bids from potential suppliers.
Individual talks with suppliers were certain to lead to an agreement, alderman Saskia Bruines wrote in a letter to the city council, but not before the October 10 deadline.
"We will ask for an exemption for our current arrangement until January 1, 2023 to guarantee the safety of supply and to facilitate negotiations," she said.
However, she added that any new contract set to enter into effect on Jan. 1 would be significantly costlier than the city's current arrangement with Gazprom.
The Hague is one of many Dutch municipalities that have an energy contract with Gazprom, but is the first to indicate it will ask for an exemption to the sanctions.




