Russia Is Being Pushed Into The Abyss Of Oil Collapse
5- 18.09.2025, 12:21
- 4,682
There are no inexhaustible resources in nature.
On 16 September, the Ukrainian Defense Forces struck the Saratov oil refinery. This enterprise is involved in meeting the needs of the Russian Armed Forces and has already been attacked by Ukrainian drones more than once. In particular, in mid-August, this refinery stopped receiving oil after our drones struck it. The Russian "oil industry" burns so often that we are gradually getting used to such reports.
Beyond these news there is another trend: Russia is reducing exports and will probably be forced to reduce oil production, as the technical capacity to store oil and oil products is decreasing... Russia's macroeconomic indicators are classified, but Russians cannot hide the general trends of export-oriented industries - trading partners still learn about the real state of affairs from their counterparties.
The first news about the decline in exports appeared back in late July: in the first seven months of 2025, Moscow exported 4% less crude oil than in the same period in 2024. Russia's economic partners received a second "alarming message" at the end of August: amid Ukrainian drone attacks, exports fell by 320,000 barrels per day in just one week, reaching their lowest level in a month.
The global news agency Reuters, citing three industry sources, reported that Russian refineries are stopping accepting oil from production companies for storage in their system. Reuters' sources suggest that Russia will have to cut oil production if the Ukrainian drone attacks don't stop. And they will not stop - we guarantee it.
This is a very positive trend for us, as strikes deep into Russian territory allow us not only to reduce fuel supplies to the Russian army, but also to generally undermine the military and economic potential of the enemy. The quantity of our strikes is turning into a new quality: the enemy's key industry - hydrocarbon exports - is gradually being destroyed. The constant deterioration of economic indicators, theoretically, can lead to the collapse of Russian statehood.
Whatever the economic or demographic potential of the enemy, we realize that there are no inexhaustible resources in nature. At the same time, we do not expect Russia to "collapse" tomorrow, and we realize that we have a lot of work ahead of us. Every day we take a small step towards a big goal and see concrete results that inspire. Glory to Ukraine!
Yury Fedorenko, Facebook