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Iran Conflict 2026
27APR

Baltic Terminals Stay Offline; Russia Reroutes Through Arctic

2 min read
10:32UTC

Both Ust-Luga and Primorsk remained closed for petroleum products into a second week, with Primorsk's 40% storage loss confirming lasting physical damage as Russia attempts Arctic rerouting.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Ust-Luga's crude terminal is intact, pointing to faster crude recovery; Primorsk's 40% storage loss constrains product exports for weeks.

Planet Labs satellite imagery from 1 April confirmed Ust-Luga's crude terminal is physically intact, while fuel and product terminals bear fire traces from Ukraine's four-strike Baltic campaign . Primorsk suffered more lasting damage: eight 50,000 cubic metre reservoir losses represent permanent storage reduction until repairs complete.

Transneft CEO Nikolai Tokarev publicly acknowledged that rerouting volumes to Murmansk at short notice is difficult. Ice-class vessels are not abundant and Arctic transit times nearly double those from the Baltic (15 to 20 days versus 8 to 10). Russia's earlier refinery strikes at Promsintez and YANOS compounded the logistics challenge by reducing inland processing capacity.

Eighty-five sanctioned shadow tankers have sailed along Norwegian coastal waters since October 2025. Norwegian security officials describe a monitoring gap in their territorial waters. The Arctic logistics infrastructure was not built to absorb Baltic volumes at short notice, and each week of delay brings Russia closer to the storage saturation threshold that would force production cuts.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Russia's main oil export terminals on the Baltic Sea are still shut down for fuel products two weeks after Ukrainian drone strikes. Russia is trying to redirect oil shipments through Arctic routes near Murmansk, but those routes are slower and require specialist ice-capable ships that are in short supply.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Russia built its seaborne export infrastructure around Baltic terminals — Ust-Luga and Primorsk handle roughly 60% of seaborne crude — with no equivalent Arctic alternative at scale. The shadow fleet expansion since 2022 added volume capacity but not port infrastructure.

Arctic ice-class vessel supply is a structural constraint: Russia commissioned fewer than 30 vessels capable of sustained Arctic routing, against demand requiring 50+. Primorsk's eight damaged reservoirs represent a storage bottleneck that rerouting cannot bypass — crude must still pass through terminal storage before loading.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Crude terminal structural integrity at Ust-Luga suggests faster recovery for crude exports than for petroleum products.

  • Risk

    Norway faces a monitoring gap as 85+ sanctioned shadow tankers transit its coastal waters en route to Arctic export routes.

First Reported In

Update #11 · Russia Sells Less Oil but Earns More

Reuters via US News· 5 Apr 2026
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