Ukraine’s defence agencies are claiming that their campaign of strikes on Russian oil infrastructure, combined with Western sanctions, are indirectly benefiting major Western oil companies. According to The Kyiv Independent, Ukraine’s military and energy officials attribute rising refining margins at ExxonMobil, Chevron, Shell, and TotalEnergies to disruptions in Russian oil-product exports and constrained global fuel supply.
According to Ukrainian officials, nearly 160 successful strikes have been carried out this year against refineries, terminals, and storage depots, cutting Russian refining capacity by roughly one-fifth. Kyiv’s estimates, drawn from internal defence briefings and trade-tracking data from Kpler, suggest that Russia’s refined-product exports have fallen by about 500,000 barrels per day since July. The government argues that this shortfall coincides with a 61% surge in refining profits among Western oil majors during the third quarter.
The claim comes as Ukraine expands its drone operations into the Black Sea, where an oil tanker at a Russian export port was recently set ablaze. The incident marked one of the most significant maritime strikes of the year, targeting fuel logistics vital to Russia’s southern export routes.
Western financial filings show that downstream and trading divisions posted strong quarterly results, but the companies have not connected those gains to Ukrainian actions. U.S. and EU sanctions on Russian producers have already constrained flows of crude and refined products to global markets, tightening margins even before the latest attacks.
Kyiv’s framing positions its strike campaign as both a military and economic tool designed to degrade Russia’s energy leverage. No independent verification of the claims has been published, and none of the companies named have commented publicly on the reported link between Ukrainian operations and their financial performance.
By Charles Kennedy for Oilprice.com
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