
Ukraine’s latest long-range drone strikes have significantly disrupted Russia’s oil export logistics, targeting key Baltic and Black Sea terminals that form the backbone of its seaborne crude trade.
The most critical impact has been reported at the Primorsk oil terminal, Russia’s largest Baltic export hub operated by Transneft. The strike, carried out around 23 March 2026, damaged storage infrastructure, including fuel tanks, and triggered fires that forced partial suspension of operations. Primorsk typically handles close to 1 million barrels per day (bpd) of crude oil, along with substantial diesel exports, making it a high-value logistics target.
Additional strikes were reported at the Ust-Luga port and the Novorossiysk port, alongside attacks on inland refineries and pipeline nodes. This multi-point targeting has created a cascading disruption across Russia’s export network rather than an isolated port shutdown.
Extent of damage and operational disruption
Current estimates suggest that up to 40% of Russia’s oil export capacity—approximately 2 million bpd—has been temporarily knocked offline due to the combined impact of these strikes.
The damage profile is concentrated in:
Tank farms, where fires have compromised storage capacity
Loading systems, including pumping stations and marine loading arms
Pipeline inflows, affected by upstream infrastructure hits
While some components, such as pumping systems, can be restored within days to weeks, storage tank repairs typically require several weeks to months, depending on the extent of structural damage and fire exposure.
However, the primary constraint is not engineering—it is security risk. Repeated strikes on the same assets could delay full restoration indefinitely, effectively extending disruption timelines beyond standard repair cycles.
Rebuild timelines and logistical adjustments
In stable conditions, partial operations at affected ports could resume within 1–3 weeks using bypass systems and reduced capacity handling. Full recovery, particularly for heavily damaged tank farms, may take 1–3 months or longer.
In response, Russia is already adjusting logistics flows:
Diversion of cargoes toward Far East terminals such as Kozmino
Increased reliance on longer-haul routes to Asian buyers
Reallocation of tanker fleets, including non-Western “shadow fleet” vessels
These adjustments, while mitigating export losses, come at the cost of higher freight rates, longer voyage cycles, and reduced overall system efficiency.
Impact on global oil trade
The disruption is beginning to reflect in global markets. Reduced Russian export availability is tightening supply, contributing to upward pressure on crude prices, with benchmarks trending toward the $100 per barrel range.
For the shipping and logistics sector, the implications are immediate:
Longer tonne-mile demand, supporting tanker earnings
Increased congestion at alternative export terminals
Higher insurance and risk premiums in affected regions
Additionally, disruption at primary loading ports complicates Russia’s ability to maintain consistent export volumes under existing sanction-evasion mechanisms.
This wave of attacks marks a clear shift toward targeting energy logistics infrastructure as a strategic objective. By focusing on ports, storage, and pipelines simultaneously, Ukraine is not just reducing output—it is disrupting the entire export chain from wellhead to vessel loading.
Unlike refinery strikes, which primarily affect product output, port disruptions directly impact international trade flows, making them more consequential for global supply chains.
The strikes on Primorsk, Ust-Luga, and Novorossiysk highlight a growing vulnerability in Russia’s oil export system. With a significant share of capacity offline and repairs constrained by ongoing security threats, the situation represents more than a temporary outage.
It is an evolving energy logistics disruption with global trade implications, where recovery timelines will depend as much on military developments as on technical repairs.
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