Russian oil and gas revenues fell roughly 32% year-on-year in January 2026, with Urals Crude trading below $38 per barrel against a Brent benchmark of $62.50 1. The discount of roughly $24.50 per barrel reflects the cumulative weight of the G7 price cap, shipping insurance restrictions, and the progressive loss of European buyers.
The revenue collapse precedes the EU's phased ban on Russian gas imports, which begins 25 April 2026 with Liquefied Natural Gas and extends to all Russian gas by year-end 2. Gas revenues partially offset oil price erosion through 2025; that cushion faces elimination within nine months. Russia's 2026 federal budget was drafted assuming Urals Crude at $60 per barrel — a price the market has not delivered since mid-2025.
The rouble has held at approximately 95–100 to the dollar, but this stability rests on capital controls rather than market confidence. The Central Bank of Russia maintains it through mandatory conversion of foreign currency earnings, restrictions on capital outflows, and limits on retail foreign currency purchases — measures imposed in 2022 and tightened repeatedly since. These controls prevent a visible currency crisis but do not address the underlying fiscal gap. Defence spending consumed an estimated 40% of federal expenditure in 2025, according to the International Institute for Strategic Studies 3.
At current oil prices and munitions consumption rates — 8,828 kamikaze drones launched in a single 24-hour period on 2 March, triple the 2025 daily average — Russia's military expenditure is accelerating while the revenue base contracts. The approaching EU gas ban removes the last major revenue buffer. Capital controls can delay the fiscal reckoning; they cannot prevent it.
