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).
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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 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.
The Soviet-era pipeline, which flows through Ukraine and supplies Hungary and Slovakia, resumed operation last month.
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