Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
Iran Conflict 2026
22MAY

CEPA scale check: 0.46% of Russian oil

3 min read
11:08UTC

David Axe at CEPA, citing RUSI research, assessed Ukraine's 130 oil strikes in 2025 produced $863 million of damage against roughly $189 billion in annual Russian oil revenue.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Ukraine's oil strike campaign delivers footage; the revenue figures sit on the wrong side of the scale.

David Axe at CEPA (Center for European Policy Analysis), citing RUSI research published this month, assessed that Ukraine's 130 refinery and port strikes in 2025 delivered only a 6% export reduction against 2024 1. Cumulative damage came to $863 million against roughly $189 billion in annual Russian oil revenue, or 0.46% of the base.

That is roughly the cost of three weeks of Patriot operations in the Middle East, set against a rounding error in Moscow's books. At that tempo, Ukraine would need over two centuries of strike operations to match a single year of Russian oil revenue. Ukrainian targeteers pick lightly-defended terminals for visible damage, leaving hardened core infrastructure intact. Footage does most of the work the revenue figures do not.

Two separate considerations compound the scale problem. Fire Point, the Ukrainian consortium manufacturing the Flamingo cruise missile , is reportedly under investigation by NABU (Ukraine's National Anti-Corruption Bureau). Only nine Flamingos have been fired in six months, against the hundreds that any serious strike campaign against hardened infrastructure would require. And the Iran war separated price from volume in a way the infrastructure campaign cannot control: Urals rode the Hormuz premium while Baltic throughput was recovering. When Kyiv asks for Patriots for ballistic defence while launching its own drones at pipelines Chevron part-owns, the two trade-offs sit on the same ledger.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Ukraine has been hitting Russian oil refineries and export terminals in a campaign aimed at cutting the revenue that funds Russia's military. A new report from the Center for European Policy Analysis and RUSI found that 130 such strikes across 2025 reduced Russia's oil exports by only 6% and caused $863 million in total damage. Russia earns roughly $189 billion per year from oil. So the entire year of strikes damaged the equivalent of 0.46% of annual revenue. To put that in context, Russia earns back that amount in about 42 hours. The Iran war's oil price spike likely generated more revenue for Russia in a single week than Ukraine's entire 2025 strike campaign cost Russia in a year.

What could happen next?
  • Meaning

    The CEPA finding reframes the Baltic and Black Sea oil campaigns as primarily having operational-denial value, not economic attrition value; Ukraine's justification for the campaign must shift accordingly.

    Immediate · 0.78
  • Risk

    If the Fire Point/NABU investigation reveals systematic corruption in Ukraine's precision strike procurement, it will complicate Western partner willingness to fund further anti-infrastructure weapons deliveries.

    Short term · 0.62
  • Opportunity

    The 6% export-volume reduction, while small in revenue terms, represents real capacity constraints on specific refinery outputs (aviation fuel, diesel) that have strategic value beyond headline revenue figures.

    Medium term · 0.55
First Reported In

Update #12 · Three narrowings of US support for Kyiv

Center for European Policy Analysis· 11 Apr 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
CEPA scale check: 0.46% of Russian oil
Load-bearing counter-evidence against the narrative that Ukraine's strike campaign is constraining Russian oil revenue.
Different Perspectives
Islamabad (Pakistan Armed Forces and Foreign Ministry)
Islamabad (Pakistan Armed Forces and Foreign Ministry)
Munir's cancellation reflects Islamabad's assessment that no bridging formula survives the collision of Khamenei's uranium directive, Rubio's Hormuz red line, and the sequencing gap simultaneously; Naqvi's relay role signals continued Pakistani engagement without a mandate to close any of the three gaps.
Lloyd's of London war-risk market
Lloyd's of London war-risk market
Published PGSA coordinates give underwriters the cartographic input to model tanker route exposure inside the claimed zone; OFAC's Sunday GL V ruling determines whether Hengli-Singapore dollar-clearing routes carry secondary-sanctions risk from Monday, adding a compliance layer to the existing kinetic war-risk premium.
Hengaw Human Rights Organisation
Hengaw Human Rights Organisation
Zaleh's trial lasted 'only a few minutes' before a conviction on PDKI membership charges at Naqadeh; the pattern of solitary detention, coerced confession, and minutes-long hearing is consistent with wartime political-charge architecture the organisation has documented across the Kurdish northwest.
Gulf Arab states (UAE, Bahrain, Kuwait)
Gulf Arab states (UAE, Bahrain, Kuwait)
The UAE has not published counter-coordinates to the PGSA's Hormuz zone map, leaving Emirati silence as the maritime-law response to Iran's charted boundary claim. Abu Dhabi's published position now defaults by omission toward implied acceptance of the zone's cartographic fact.
Beijing's Ministry of Commerce
Beijing's Ministry of Commerce
MOFCOM's blocking order covers Hengli and four other designated refineries on the mainland but does not extend to the dollar-clearing layer in Singapore, making Sunday's GL V expiry the first live test of whether Beijing's sanctions-defiance architecture reaches the place where dollars settle.
The White House
The White House
Trump's verbal track on Iran has produced no signed Iran-specific presidential instrument across 84 days; both financial-sector EOs signed on 19 May are unrelated to Hormuz or the IRGC. Rubio's public naming of the Hormuz toll architecture as a deal-killer is the administration's most concrete new position this week.