The Peter Zeihan Podcast Series - Ukraine Strikes Russia's Druzhba Oil Pipeline || Peter Zeihan
Episode Date: August 28, 2025The Russians have been funding their war effort in Ukraine with oil exports, but some new Ukrainian tactics are disrupting that flow.Join the Patreon here: https://www.patreon.com/PeterZeihanFull News...letter: https://mailchi.mp/zeihan/ukraine-strikes-russias-druzhba-oil-pipeline
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, Al-Pater-Zeyn here, coming to you from Colorado.
And today we're going to talk about oil exports from Russia and a new wrinkle in the Ukraine War.
As I'm sure, most of you know, there are a number of sanctions against all things Russian at really all levels.
And energy is one of the most important ones.
Oil has long been Russia's number one source of financing.
And until the Ukraine war began, the vast majority of that crude flowed west through what's called the Drusba pipeline network to Western Europe and Central Europe.
But bit by bit, the Europeans have,
weaned themselves off, and aside from a few exceptions for Hungary, Slovakian Czech Republic,
who are all landlocked countries and so have limited options, everyone else in Europe is stopped
using Russian crude directly. You can make the argument that the crude is being exported somewhere
refining the finished product and sent back to Europe, and that's fair, but in terms of raw crude,
it's no longer going to the Europeans really much at all. The Druzaa pipeline maintains a capacity
of well over a couple million barrels per day and is now only taking shipments of about
400,000. So we're looking at a significant reduction already. And some of those flow-throughs
aren't even Russian crude. They're Kazakh crude, which is not affected by the sanctions. Anyway,
the newest development is that over the course of the last 18 months, the Ukrainians have gotten
better at better at striking economic targets within the Russian Federation, specifically
going after the energy complex. Now, until now, most of those attacks have focused on things like
refineries, where the value add generates some more income for the Russians and generate
the fuel that they need for the war machine. But what we've seen in the last couple of weeks
is our first meaningful attacks against Russian oil transit, specifically pumping stations
on the Drusba network. Now, if you're French or British or German or Italian, this doesn't
matter because you don't use that crude. But if you're Hungarian and you've been opposing European
actions to assist the Ukrainians for a while now, all of a sudden you're getting a little
epileptic. And so the Hungarian government has been very accusatory.
towards the Ukrainians. And we should expect more of this. What this basically is is a test case to see
what Europe's collective response will be, to see what Trump's response will be. And if they are muted,
you should expect the Ukrainians to go after those pumping stations in volume. Now that the Europeans
have pretty much weaned themselves off completely, we've had a flip of the political considerations.
Had this happened earlier in the war, the Europeans probably would have backed away from
supporting Ukraine for economic reasons. But now that they've moved on, the Ukrainians are seeing an
opportunity belatedly to take out the entirety of the Russian oil export income. And if they can do that,
then all of a sudden the Russians can't pay the Iranians for imported drones. They can't pay
the Koreans, the North Koreans for imported artillery shells and they can't pay for all the drone
parts that come in from China. If this works, it is potentially the most dramatic economic shift we'll have
seen in the war to this point, and the Russians are going to have to find a new way to fund
everything. But early days, this is just step one. The Ukrainians are now in wait and see how
everyone reacts.
