MISSION BRIEF
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As of yesterday — May 1 — the flow of Kazakh crude oil through the northern branch of the Druzhba pipeline to Germany's PCK Schwedt refinery stopped. Not a disruption. Not an anomaly. A deliberate cutoff, announced ten days earlier by Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak at the Kremlin, cited as "technical limitations," executed on the first of the month with the revised export schedule already distributed to both Moscow and Astana. 43,000 barrels per day — 17% of Schwedt's supply — gone from the pipe.
The PCK refinery in Schwedt, Brandenburg — about 100 kilometers northeast of Berlin — supplies 90% of the fuel for Berlin and the surrounding region: diesel, petrol, heating oil, and jet fuel for the airports. Germany's federal government placed the plant under a trusteeship in 2022, effectively seizing operational control from its majority owner, Russia's Rosneft — which still legally holds a 54.17% stake, with Shell at 37.5% and Eni at 8.33%. Germany controls the refinery. Rosneft owns it. And Russia just cut off a meaningful share of its feedstock the morning after officially resuming oil flows to Hungary and Slovakia through the pipeline's southern branch.
The timing of the two moves — southern branch reopened April 22, northern branch cut May 1 — was not coincidental. The southern branch had been shut since a Russian drone strike damaged it in late January, leaving Hungary and Slovakia without supply and prompting Hungary's Viktor Orbán to veto a €90 billion EU loan to Ukraine. The pipeline reopened only after Orbán lost Hungary's election on April 12, his successor Peter Magyar pledged to drop the veto, and Kyiv completed repairs. The loan was unblocked the same day oil resumed flowing to Budapest. Russia got what it needed from the southern branch — a months-long hostage operation that extracted leverage from Ukraine's loan timeline. Then it turned off the northern tap.
Russia controls whether Kazakh oil physically reaches Germany not because it owns the crude, but because the pipeline runs through Russian territory and Transneft operates the transit. Kazakhstan cannot export around Russia without an entirely different routing — and the Caspian Pipeline Consortium (CPC), the alternative that carries 80% of Kazakhstan's exports to Novorossiysk on the Black Sea, was itself hit by Ukrainian fixed-wing drones on the night of April 6, damaging a mooring point, a loading berth, and setting four storage tanks ablaze. The two main arteries for Kazakh crude are a Russian-controlled pipeline and a drone-targeted Black Sea terminal. There is no third option at scale.
Brandenburg's Prime Minister said this week that supply to Schwedt is "secured at 80%" for May through alternatives from the port of Rostock and Poland's port of Gdańsk. Germany's Economy Minister said she could not comment on possible shortages in Berlin.
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THE OPERATION
Three pipes, two wars
The supply chain for Schwedt's replacement feedstock now runs through three choke points, each with its own vulnerability. The first is Rostock, Germany's Baltic port, which has been handling roughly 60% of Schwedt's supply since Germany cut Russian crude — a port with limited throughput expansion and no pipeline redundancy into Schwedt's configuration. The second is Gdańsk, Poland's Baltic port, which previously handled about 20% and is now in emergency talks with Berlin to absorb more, but port access, shipping schedules, and refinery configuration compatibility are all unsolved. The third is Ust-Luga — Russia's Baltic export terminal — through which Kazakhstan announced it would reroute 100,000 of the displaced metric tons per month, with the remaining 160,000 flowing through CPC.
Ust-Luga is the same port Ukraine has been striking repeatedly in 2026. Ukrainian drone attacks on Ust-Luga and the Baltic port of Primorsk forced temporary shutdowns earlier this year, cutting Russia's total seaborne oil exports by 43% in the week of March 22–29 — down to 2.318 million barrels per day from 4.072 million the week before, according to tanker loading data. Only 22 tankers were dispatched that week against a normal count of 37. The port recovered, but the pattern is established: Ukraine targets Russian export infrastructure, Russia routes Kazakh barrels through that same infrastructure, and Germany's supply chain depends on whether the drones show up that night.
The CPC Novorossiysk terminal — the other leg of Kazakhstan's rerouted volumes — had its offshore mooring system and loading berth damaged on April 6, with four storage tanks burning. The CPC carries roughly 1% of the world's oil supply and handles the output of Tengiz and Kashagan, the two largest Kazakh fields, where Chevron, ExxonMobil, Shell, and Lukoil all hold stakes. Kazakhstan lost an estimated $1.5 billion in January alone from CPC disruptions, according to local energy analysts. The US government — whose companies own roughly 28% of the CPC — formally asked Ukraine to stop targeting it. Ukraine has not stopped.
In 2025, Kazakhstan delivered 2.146 million metric tons of crude to the PCK Schwedt refinery via Druzhba — a 44% jump from 2024, as Germany leaned harder on Astana to replace Russian Urals volumes after sanctions. In Q1 2026 alone, another 730,000 tons arrived. Those volumes ended yesterday. Kazakhstan's energy ministry says the annual production target is unchanged. The question is not whether the oil exists. The question is whether there is a route to move it that Russia does not control and Ukraine has not already put in its targeting queue.
On the same day Russia cut Druzhba flows north, the Druzhba southern branch reopened for Hungary and Slovakia — Russian oil flowing south to Budapest as Kazakh oil stopped flowing north to Berlin. The pipeline's Russian name means "friendship."
RULES OF ENGAGEMENT
Your exposure
The AAA national average for a gallon of regular gasoline hit $4.39 on May 1 — up nearly 30 cents in a single week, the headline AAA itself ran above its data table. The Schwedt disruption is a European supply story, but the US refining margin and energy price structure do not stay insulated from European fuel tightness — particularly for distillates. Diesel and jet fuel prices in Europe are already under pressure from the closure of third-country refining circuits that processed Russian crude, with the EU's January 21 restrictions on refined products made from Russian oil in third-country refineries now in full effect. The International Energy Agency's director told the Associated Press that Europe has roughly six weeks of jet fuel buffer. The IEA said that in late April. The clock is running.
The US refinery system is not Schwedt, and American consumers are not queuing at Berlin gas stations. But the global distillate market is one pool. When European diesel tightens — from Schwedt running at 80% and CPC getting hit and Druzhba north shut off — the differential closes and US diesel prices follow. Diesel, nationally, is above $5.40 per gallon as of the last EIA weekly print. Every truck on a US highway runs on that number. Every grocery delivery. Every construction job site. Every farm running equipment through spring planting season.
Russia cut off the refinery that fuels Germany's capital on the same morning it reopened the pipeline that kept Hungary cooperative, using the same pipe in two directions simultaneously as a geopolitical instrument — and Kazakhstan's fallback route runs through a Baltic port Ukraine has been bombing and a Black Sea terminal Chevron and ExxonMobil own a piece of, which Ukraine has already hit twice and the US has asked them, formally, to stop hitting, and they haven't.
