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Russia-Ukraine War 2026
11APR

Kyiv moves the oil war to the Black Sea

2 min read
16:48UTC

Ukrainian drones struck the Caspian Pipeline Consortium terminal at Novorossiysk on 6 April, extending an anti-oil campaign that had worked the Baltic ports to year-low throughput.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Kyiv accepted a diplomatic cost to extend the oil strike map past the Baltic.

Ukrainian drones struck the Caspian Pipeline Consortium terminal at Novorossiysk on 6 April, followed by a hit at Taman 1. The strikes carry the anti-oil fight into terminals that Ukraine's earlier Baltic campaign had left alone. Moscow scrambled to reroute crude through Vysotsk and Taman after Ust-Luga and Primorsk lost capacity in late March.

The Baltic ports are partially back on line. Ust-Luga resumed crude loading on 5 April, but Primorsk berths dropped from ten to four, and combined daily throughput fell to about 115,000 tonnes, a year-low 2. That partial recovery is exactly the dynamic the Iran war already complicated: the Russia-Iran corridor still runs, and Urals hit $123 a barrel earlier in April , offsetting the 43% Baltic volume drop with a price lift Ukraine cannot influence.

The southern expansion carries a different diplomatic risk than the Baltic strikes did. The CPC terminal's Chevron and ExxonMobil shareholders triggered a State Department demarche addressed separately elsewhere in this briefing. Kyiv continued striking after receiving the warning, accepting a commercial-channel diplomatic cost to keep the strike map expanding rather than retreat to Baltic assets with no American interest register.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Ukraine has been attacking Russia's oil export infrastructure to cut revenue that funds the war. The 6 April strike at Novorossiysk on the Black Sea expanded that campaign beyond the Baltic coast, where Ukraine has been hitting terminals for months. The Baltic terminals have partially recovered: Ust-Luga resumed loading on 5 April, but at year-low throughput. The Black Sea expansion brought the campaign to a terminal partly owned by Chevron and ExxonMobil, which prompted the US State Department to warn Ukraine to stop. This created a direct conflict between Ukraine's military strategy and US energy company interests.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Continued Novorossiysk strikes risk triggering US suspension of other forms of military support, creating a forced choice between the oil campaign and broader US assistance.

  • Consequence

    Baltic oil throughput at 115,000 tonnes per day, a year-low, represents a real constraint on Russian export volumes but is partially offset by the Urals price surge driven by the Iran war (ID:2016).

First Reported In

Update #12 · Three narrowings of US support for Kyiv

Kyiv Independent· 11 Apr 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Kyiv moves the oil war to the Black Sea
A southern pivot that trades diplomatic cover for visible damage on assets Chevron partly owns.
Different Perspectives
Volodymyr Zelenskyy, President of Ukraine
Volodymyr Zelenskyy, President of Ukraine
Framed the Washington meeting as Ukraine ending an externally imposed diplomatic pause while pressing military advantage through the air defence campaign and Zaporizhzhia counteroffensive. Ukraine is approaching negotiations from the strongest battlefield position since 2023.
Abu Dhabi mediators
Abu Dhabi mediators
Invested diplomatic credibility in sustaining the peace process through two rounds and a planned March trilateral. Russia's suspension threat tests whether the UAE can exert enough influence on Moscow to keep the talks on track.
Kremlin (Dmitry Peskov)
Kremlin (Dmitry Peskov)
Russia has not acknowledged the spring offensive designation or the 206,200 confirmed death toll. State media frames the 948-drone barrage as a legitimate response to Ukrainian strikes on Russian territory and dismisses Mediazona casualty figures as fabricated.
Former US sanctions enforcement officials
Former US sanctions enforcement officials
Former KleptoCapture leader Andrew Adams and former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo both warned the dismantling of enforcement infrastructure is structural, not temporary, and difficult to reverse.
Viktor Orbán
Viktor Orbán
Hungary is the only EU member frozen out of the SAFE rearmament fund, now also halting reverse gas exports to Ukraine. Budapest frames both moves as legitimate pressure over the Druzhba pipeline shutdown ahead of Hungary's 12 April elections.
Keir Starmer, UK Prime Minister
Keir Starmer, UK Prime Minister
Positioned the UK-Ukraine drone partnership as a national security imperative extending beyond Ukraine, rebuking the Iran conflict's pull on Western attention. The defence industrial declaration commits British manufacturing to Ukrainian drone designs.