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Russia’s Dual-War Windfall: How Two Conflicts Are Driving Oil Toward $150 Per Barrel
TLDR:
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TLDR:
Russia Benefits as Iran’s Gulf Strikes Push Oil Above $100
Ukraine Retaliates Against Russian Refineries and Builds New Alliances
Russia’s monthly oil revenue doubled to $24 billion as Brent crude surpassed $100 per barrel.
Ukraine’s drone strikes have taken roughly 40 percent of Russian export refining capacity offline.
Iran’s attack on Ras Laffan removed 17 percent of global LNG and 33 percent of helium supply.
Western sanctions capped Russian oil at $60 per barrel, but the dual-war supply shock made it void.
Russia’s oil revenue has surged sharply as two concurrent conflicts disrupt global energy supply chains. Ukrainian drone strikes have degraded roughly 40 percent of Russian export refining capacity in recent weeks.
At the same time, Iran’s strikes on Gulf infrastructure pushed Brent crude above $100 per barrel. Russia’s Foreign Minister Lavrov and President Putin have both publicly forecast oil reaching $150 per barrel. Russia appears financially positioned to benefit from both conflicts running simultaneously.
Russia Benefits as Iran’s Gulf Strikes Push Oil Above $100
Russia supplied Shahed drone technology and design upgrades to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps over recent years. Those drones, combined with Chinese BeiDou-guided ballistic missiles, struck the Ras Laffan complex in Qatar.
The attack removed 17 percent of global LNG export capacity and 33 percent of global helium supply. The energy shock from those strikes quickly pushed Brent crude above $100 per barrel.
Russia’s monthly oil revenue consequently doubled to $24 billion as crude prices climbed. The Western sanctions price cap of $60 per barrel has since become functionally irrelevant at current market levels.
Sanctions were designed to target Russian oil pricing, but both conflicts have instead targeted global supply directly. Supply disruptions have overpowered the sanctions framework that was originally built to limit Russian earnings.
On March 27, Lavrov publicly warned of what he called “the most severe energy crisis in human history.” Putin followed by openly forecasting oil at $150 per barrel shortly after.
Both leaders are stating a price target that enriches Russia with every dollar crude rises above current levels. Social media analyst Shanaka Anslem Perera described it as a self-amplifying feedback loop that continuously benefits Russia.
Perera wrote: “Russia arms Iran. Iran closes Hormuz. Hormuz closure spikes oil. Oil spike enriches Russia.” He further noted that Russia needs neither Hormuz reopened nor its own refineries fully operational.
Russia needs both disruptions to persist so their combined effect drives oil toward $150. The compound supply shock, as a result, overwhelms a sanctions architecture never designed for this dual-war scenario.
Ukraine Retaliates Against Russian Refineries and Builds New Alliances
Ukraine struck the Tuapse refinery complex, one of Russia’s largest, setting it ablaze with precision drones. Combined with weather damage and maintenance backlogs, approximately 40 percent of Russian export refining capacity is now offline.
Each barrel of Russian refined product removed from markets tightens global supply further. Every tightening, in turn, pushes oil closer to the $150 target Russia has publicly forecast.
That same week, Ukrainian President Zelensky traveled to Saudi Arabia for high-level diplomatic engagements. Ukraine offered its battle-tested anti-drone expertise to protect Gulf LNG and helium infrastructure directly.
Ukrainian technology has already proven effective against the same Shahed variants Iran deploys in the broader region. This opened an unexpected military technology export market for Ukraine among the world’s wealthiest nations.
The OECD revised US inflation projections upward to 4.2 percent, directly linking the change to the Iran-driven energy shock. BlackRock CEO Larry Fink stated publicly that $150 oil would likely trigger a global recession.
Ukraine’s strikes on Russian refineries and Iran’s pressure on Gulf supplies are tightening markets from opposite directions.
Russia, however, continues collecting elevated revenue from price premiums generated by both disruptions running at once.
Perera closed his widely shared analysis with a sharp observation: “Two wars. One price. One beneficiary. The arsonist is selling fire insurance.”
The feedback loop connecting both conflicts shows no sign of breaking under current conditions. Russia’s oil earnings continue to grow beyond what any sanctions cap was structured to contain.
As long as both wars persist, Russia’s financial position remains stronger than at any prior point since invading Ukraine.
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