CREA, the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air, reported that Urals crude, the benchmark grade for Russian exports, averaged $63.18 a barrel in June, down 26% month-on-month 1. That compounds May's 12% fall from $82.02 , and seaborne oil-product loadings dropped 21% to a record low as the refinery strikes bit 2.
The ledger has another side. CREA found that oil-product revenue rose 14% month-on-month in June, its highest since June 2024, because tight global supply lifted prices even as Russian volumes fell 3. The rise means Moscow banked more per tonne on a smaller flow of exports.
Demand held up in Asia. China took 41% of the top-five buyers' Russian crude in June, and India, the second-largest buyer, lifted its imports 34% to a record 4. The pressure falls on volume and on the state's ability to guarantee supply at home, not yet on the headline cash.
