Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak announced on 8 July that Russia would halt all diesel exports abroad until 31 July, in a televised meeting chaired by Vladimir Putin 1. Russia is the world's second-largest diesel exporter behind the United States, and for the first time the decree binds producers as well as the traders that earlier bans left free to sell. Two weeks earlier Novak had told Putin fuel supply was under control as fifteen regions rationed petrol ; days after that Putin admitted the fuel-station queues in public for the first time .
The decree protects domestic pumps at the cost of export earnings. Turkey and Brazil together take at least half of Russia's diesel cargoes, and both lose access until the ban lapses 2. It formalises a fall already under way: seaborne diesel exports had dropped 39% month-on-month in June before the order was signed 3. Global benchmark diesel prices rose almost 13% on the announcement, a cost that reaches hauliers and farmers well beyond Russia 4.
Russia steadied fuel shortages with rhetoric through 2023 and 2024, when temporary bans targeted grey-market traders and left producers free to export. Extending this decree to producers removes the last legal channel keeping cargoes moving, which is why it reads as forced rather than routine seasonal management. Moscow is now rationing its own exports by law, a step it deferred for two years.
