The average price of Russia’s flagship export oil blend jumped to its highest level since September 2014 in April, as the conflict in the Middle East delivered an unexpected windfall to the Kremlin.
The Urals blend rose to $94.87 per barrel (€80.64) last month, up 23% from $77 (€65.45) per barrel in March and more than double its price at the beginning of the year, when it stood at $40.95 (€34.81).
The April price, published in data released by Russia’s Ministry of Economic Development on Monday, also exceeded the level assumed in country’s 2026 federal budget by nearly $36 (€30.60) per barrel.
Finance Minister Anton Siluanov said last week that the state budget had already received 200 billion roubles (€2.27 billion) in extra oil revenues thanks to higher prices.
If current trends continue, monthly oil and gas tax revenues could eventually reach around 1 trillion roubles (€8.5 billion), an expert told independent media outlet The Moscow Times.
Russia’s reported income boost comes despite disruptions to its exports in April, with Ukrainian drone attacks forcing temporary closures at key ports and refineries, and crude shipments halted through the Druzhba pipeline—Russia’s only remaining direct oil route to Europe.
At the same time, the overall impact of Ukraine’s long-range strikes on Russia’s oil infrastructure remains difficult to assess, as Russian authorities continue to withhold full information about the situation.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky recently said that Ukrainian strikes on Russian oil infrastructure have cost Russia at least $7 billion in revenue since the beginning of 2026. He also said the attacks have forced several key Russian oil ports, including Ust-Luga and Primorsk in the Leningrad region, to operate below capacity.
However, an April 14 report by the International Energy Agency (IEA) on the oil market found that Russian exports of crude oil and petroleum products increased by 320,000 barrels per day compared to the previous month, reaching 7.1 million barrels per day in March 2026.
Export revenues also nearly doubled, rising from $9.7 billion to $19 billion, driven by higher prices. The IEA noted that it remains uncertain whether Ukrainian strikes in April 2026 will disrupt this upward trend.
The Soviet-era pipeline, which flows through Ukraine and supplies Hungary and Slovakia, resumed operation last month.
The Hormuz effect
The recent price surge has been driven by the war between the US, Israel and Iran.
Since the conflict broke out in late February, Iran has sharply restricted maritime traffic through the Strait of Hormuz—the narrow chokepoint through which roughly one-fifth of global crude oil shipments normally pass. This has tightened global supplies and pushed up prices for the international benchmark Brent crude.
Russia had sold its Urals blend at a significant discount to Brent due to Western sanctions. However, the sharp rise in global prices has narrowed that discount substantially, allowing Moscow to earn significantly more revenue per barrel.
“US action against Iran has saved both the Russian oil sector and the federal budget from a crisis that was clearly developing in late February,” Chris Weafer, CEO of Macro-Advisory, a Eurasia-focused economic consultancy, told the AP news agency.
Gains may not last
While the immediate fiscal boost strengthens Moscow’s ability to sustain its war economy, analysts caution that such gains may prove volatile.
The influential Russian think tank TsMAKP, which is close to the Kremlin, said on Monday that high global oil prices are unlikely to significantly boost Russia’s economic growth this year, as Ukrainian drone attacks and Western sanctions weigh on production and exports.
The think tank cut its forecast for Russian GDP growth this year to between 0.5% and 0.7%, down from 0.9%–1.3% just a month ago.