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Russia Bans Jet Fuel Exports Amid Ukrainian Attacks on Refineries

Severity: Medium (Score: 59.9)

Sources: Themoscowtimes, Bloomberg

Published: 2026-06-01 · Updated: 2026-06-01

Keywords: fuel, exports, russia, bans, until, november, record

Summary

On June 1, 2026, Russia announced a ban on jet fuel exports until November 30 due to increased Ukrainian strikes on oil refineries, which set a record in May. The attacks have significantly reduced domestic production, leading to fears of fuel shortages as summer travel demand rises. The ban aims to stabilize the local fuel market, although Russian officials claim there is no current shortage of jet fuel. The embargo is Russia's first on jet fuel exports, and it follows a broader ban on gasoline exports that remains in effect until July 31. Ukrainian strikes have halted production at facilities responsible for about 25% of Russia's refining capacity and over 30% of gasoline output, with processing volumes at a 16-year low. The situation is exacerbated by ongoing global energy crises linked to the Iran war. Key Points: • Russia has banned jet fuel exports until November 30, 2026, due to Ukrainian attacks. • Ukrainian strikes on oil refineries have reached record levels, impacting domestic fuel production. • The ban aims to stabilize the local fuel market amid rising summer travel demand.

Detailed Analysis

**Impact** Russian domestic jet fuel supplies are constrained due to Ukrainian attacks on oil refineries, which have reduced processing to 4.69 million barrels per day, the lowest since 2009. Approximately 25% of Russia’s refining capacity and over 30% of gasoline output are affected, causing fuel shortages and rationing in regions such as annexed Crimea. The export ban on jet fuel, effective until November 30, aims to stabilize the domestic market and protect Russian airlines. International markets are minimally impacted as Russia is not a major jet fuel exporter. **Technical Details** The attacks involve physical strikes on Russian oil refinery infrastructure, primarily targeting processing facilities. No specific cyberattack vectors, malware, CVEs, or infrastructure details are provided in the source material. The attacks have resulted in significant operational disruption at the physical and industrial control system levels but lack detailed technical indicators or kill chain stages. **Recommended Response** No specific cybersecurity mitigation steps can be recommended based on the available information. Organizations should monitor for potential escalation in attacks against critical energy infrastructure and maintain heightened situational awareness of physical and cyber threats to refinery operations. Energy sector defenders should ensure robust physical security and review incident response plans for infrastructure attacks.

Source articles (2)

  • Russia Bans Jet Fuel Exports After Record Refinery Attacks — Bloomberg · 2026-06-01
    Ukraine’s attacks on Russian oil refineries set a record in May, prompting Moscow to ban jet fuel exports and threatening to further hurt processing that’s at a 16-year low. With a risk of domestic fu…
  • Russia Bans Jet Fuel Exports Until Late November — Themoscowtimes · 2026-06-01
    The Russian government on Monday announced a ban on jet fuel exports until the end of November, as Ukrainian strikes on oil refineries throughout the country have led to slumps in domestic production…

Timeline

  • 2026-05-01 — Record Ukrainian attacks on Russian refineries: Ukrainian forces launched unprecedented strikes on oil refineries, significantly disrupting production.
  • 2026-06-01 — Russia bans jet fuel exports: The Russian government announced a ban on jet fuel exports until November 30 to ensure domestic fuel stability.
  • 2026-06-01 — Gasoline export ban continues: A total ban on gasoline exports remains in effect across Russia through July 31, 2026.

Related entities

  • Iran (Country)
  • Russia (Country)
  • Ukraine (Country)
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