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Iran Conflict 2026
9JUL

Putin admits the petrol queues himself

2 min read
12:10UTC

At a 28 June Kremlin meeting, Putin acknowledged queues at petrol stations, the first time he rather than Deputy PM Alexander Novak has owned the shortage.

ConflictAssessed
Key takeaway

Putin said on camera what Novak's messaging was built to avoid.

Vladimir Putin acknowledged "queues at gas stations" and that "the right grade of gasoline isn't always available" at a Kremlin meeting on domestic fuel supply on 28 June 1. It was the first time he, rather than Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak, had publicly owned the shortage. Five days earlier Novak had assured him fuel was "challenging but under control" as fifteen Russian regions rationed petrol .

Russia has extended its gasoline export ban to 31 July and is weighing a diesel export ban it keeps declining to impose, the Energy Ministry pointing to a failed 2023 attempt 2. Putin taking the file off Novak signals the reassurances had stopped landing, and his next appearance on fuel will show whether he hands it back.

Russia supplies roughly 11% of the world's diesel exports, so a sustained refining shutdown reaches a global fuel market well beyond its own petrol queues. A diesel export ban, still under consideration after the 28 June admission, would lift pump and freight prices outside the war zone. The shortage behind Putin's admission is a product of Ukraine's long-range drone campaign against Russian refineries.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Russia has been rationing petrol for weeks after Ukrainian drone strikes knocked out major refineries. Until now, officials like deputy prime minister Alexander Novak had downplayed the shortage as manageable. On 28 June, President Vladimir Putin himself admitted that petrol stations have queues and that the right fuel grade isn't always on the shelf, a rare personal acknowledgment from a leader who usually leaves bad news to subordinates. Russia has also extended its ban on exporting petrol, to keep more of it at home, until the end of July.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Russian refining is concentrated in a handful of large plants; Kapotnya alone supplies around 40% of Moscow region fuel, so a single strike removes capacity no other refinery can absorb quickly.

Redistributing fuel from unaffected regions depends on rail tank-car availability that has not scaled with the sudden shift in demand, meaning the shortage persists even where refining itself is untouched.

What could happen next?
  • Meaning

    Putin's personal ownership of the shortage marks a shift from delegated messaging to direct accountability, unusual for a leader who typically distances himself from unwelcome domestic news.

  • Consequence

    Extending the export ban to 31 July keeps more fuel inside Russia but does nothing to fix the rail-logistics bottleneck moving it to deficit regions.

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