BRUSSELS--The European Union's executive arm is planning new legislation as early as next year that would require national governments to give it a bigger say in negotiations with Russia on gas and nuclear-fuel supplies, according to documents seen by The Wall Street Journal.

The plans--due to be published by the European Commission on Wednesday--form part of a broader EU effort to integrate the bloc's energy market and wean the Continent off its energy dependence on Moscow. But they will do little to ease the standoff between Russia and Ukraine, in which Russian state gas company OAO Gazprom warned Tuesday that supplies to Europe could come under pressure within days.

The proposal is likely to face opposition from some governments that are benefiting from their ties to Russia. National governments--along with the European Parliament--have to approve new laws proposed by the commission. Last week, Hungary's prime minister, Viktor Orban, said he opposed any commission interference in negotiations with Moscow, saying it violates national sovereignty.

"We will have a major problem" with Brussels, Mr. Orban said. "I am expecting an escalating conflict."

The 28-country EU buys more than 50% of its energy from abroad, at an annual cost of around EUR400 billion ($454 billion)--making it the world's biggest energy importer. Six of its member countries get all of their gas imports from Russia, a reliance the commission believes has led to unfairly high prices for consumers in those countries. Several states in the bloc's east--from Bulgaria in the south to Finland in the north--also use Russian-designed reactors to produce nuclear energy, making them dependent on nuclear-fuel supplies and technology from state-owned Russian nuclear company Rosatom.

In a 21-page document, which would be followed by specific legislation, the commission pledged to take a more prominent role in challenging Russia as Europe's dominant energy supplier--although it avoided singling out Moscow in writing. "Energy policy is often used as a foreign-policy tool, in particular in major energy producing and transit countries," the document says. "This reality has to be taken into account when discussing the EU's external energy policy."

As a first step, the commission plans to take a more involved role in negotiations between European capitals and Moscow on gas-supply deals. These intergovernmental agreements form the basis for commercial contracts between Gazprom and national energy companies and have come under commission scrutiny in the past.

In an antitrust case launched against Gazprom in 2012, the commission alleges the contracts have been used to unfairly restrict governments and their gas suppliers from selling unused volumes to other countries and driving up prices for political reasons. Gazprom had denied the allegations and no formal charges have been filed in the case.

Under the plans set out in the document, governments would have to inform the commission about negotiations with Russia and other supply countries in advance, allowing its officials to check whether the agreements comply with EU competition and energy-security rules. The commission will also move to propose "standard contract clauses [which] could...more effectively avoid undue pressure and ensure respect of European rules," the document says.

Hungary will likely also be among the states pushing against commission plans to enforce more transparency in contracts linked to nuclear-power plants in member states. "The commission will update and enhance the requirements on the information to be provided...on nuclear installation projects," the document says, without giving more detail.

The commission said this month that it was examining whether a contract with Rosatom to expand Hungary's Paks nuclear plant was in line with EU rules on public procurement and state subsidies. EU rules currently require major government contracts to be awarded through a competitive tender, which a commission spokeswoman said didn't happen before the expansion of Paks was awarded to Rosatom.

In addition to enforcing more transparency in supply contracts, the document sets out plans to boost imports of liquefied natural gas, especially to countries in the Baltics and the Europe's southeast that are heavily reliant on Russian gas, and to cultivate alternative suppliers such as Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan. It also flagged measures on boosting energy efficiency and cutting carbon-dioxide emissions to reach targets decided by EU leaders last year.

Margit Feher contributed to this article.

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