Today: 11 July 2026
Russia diesel export ban leaves market short 583,000 barrels a day with U.S. stocks down
11 July 2026
3 mins read

Russia diesel export ban leaves market short 583,000 barrels a day with U.S. stocks down

LONDON, July 11, 2026, 16:10 (BST)

Russia’s diesel and gasoil shipments dropped by 583,000 barrels per day from July 1-10 compared to its 2025 average, down 71%. That drop is about 35% of the most recent weekly U.S. distillate-export rate. Refined fuel flows, not just crude, are now the key focus when trading resumes.

Markets being shut for the weekend makes the weekly scale clear: 4.1 million barrels matches about 82% of the 5 million-barrel decline in U.S. distillate inventories for the week ended July 3. The Russian shortfall is not the reason for that draw—timing and routes don’t line up. But it does point out just how thin the cushion is with a major backup supplier.

MeasureLatest readingScale comparison
Russian diesel and gasoil loadings234,000 bpd, July 1-10Off 583,000 bpd, or 71%, from 2025 average
U.S. distillate exports1.679 million bpdRussian gap is roughly 35%
U.S. distillate inventories103.6 million barrelsFell 5 million barrels in a week
One-week equivalent of Russian gap4.1 million barrelsNear 82% of U.S. stock draw

The numbers come from Kpler and EIA. The comparison is about size, not what caused what.

Moscow’s export ban is in place until July 31 and covers fuel makers, though exports under current government deals are still allowed. Russia is set to import fuel this month and has started to get gasoline by sea from India. Abhishek Kumar at Sparta Commodities called the ban “at almost the worst possible time” as Middle East troubles led to deep inventory cuts; European diesel margins hit a record $60.17 a barrel after the move. Reuters

The ban is pushing war risks into global refining margins. Ukraine said Friday it hit both Ilsky and Ust-Luga refineries after setting up a long-range strike command. Russian gasoline output is running at about 65% of capacity, according to Reuters, and the Institute for the Study of War said the sector can’t keep up with higher gasoline demand as more strikes take out refining capacity.

Brent crude finished Friday at $76.01 a barrel, posting a weekly gain of about 5.5%. The product market stayed tighter. The International Energy Agency said global oil supply climbed by 4.1 million barrels per day in June, but refined product shipments still lagged the rebound in crude. IEA forecasts suggest oil could flip to a 4.62 million-bpd surplus by 2027 from an 860,000-bpd deficit this year, provided Strait of Hormuz flows and output go back to normal. That could keep the diesel crack spread — the gap between diesel and crude prices and a refiner’s margin proxy — high even if Brent slips.

U.S. listed refiners are the main group for comparing refining stocks. Valero Energy , Marathon Petroleum and Phillips 66 have a combined disclosed refining capacity close to 8 million bpd, but the nameplate figure doesn’t match how much extra diesel they can put out. Marathon CEO Maryann Mannen said in April that stepped-up maintenance made the company better prepared for the “elevated levels of current market demand.” MarathonPetroleum.com

CompanyLatest disclosed refining scaleOperating marker
Valero EnergyThroughput capacity stands at about 3.0 million bpdOperates over 50 docks that handle product shipments
Marathon PetroleumCrude capacity reported at 2.986 million bpdDistillate yield was 1.023 million bpd in Q1; utilisation rate came in at 89%
Phillips 66Net crude throughput capacity totals 1.993 million bpdRan at 95% utilisation last quarter; clean-product yield at 87%, mostly light fuels like gasoline and diesel

Nameplate capacity isn’t the same as spare barrels. U.S. petroleum-product exports set a new weekly high at 8.7 million bpd, while Marathon’s Detroit plant, which can process 146,000 bpd, ran into a disruption. Tom Kloza, chief energy adviser at Gulf Oil, said Russia’s output of gasoline, diesel, jet fuel and fuel oil has been “decimated,” expecting more months of lost supply. Refiners make more when margins are strong, but only if their plants run steady and cargoes keep moving. Reuters

The trade may reverse ahead of Russia’s ban ending. Exiled Russian opposition voice Maxim Katz said the Kremlin will likely put the army’s fuel needs first. “He will find the fuel for the tanks. That is not the issue,” Katz said. The EIA expects global oil inventories to rise by 2.7 million bpd in Q4 and by 5 million bpd in 2027, with Brent at $70 and $65 on average. Russian outages getting fixed quicker, steady shipping at Hormuz, or more Chinese product exports could narrow crack spreads fast. But new strikes or further Middle East instability could send them higher. Fox News

Looking to this week, OPEC posts its monthly oil update Monday, July 13. On Tuesday, July 14, the EIA reports U.S. retail diesel prices. Its weekly inventory data lands Wednesday, July 15. Traders will be watching if Russian loadings stay close to 234,000 bpd, if U.S. distillate inventories rise, and if damaged Russian plants start to come back online.

The market’s focus isn’t just Brent now. It’s the diesel crack and what happens with inventories. If U.S. stocks fail to rebuild, refiners who can export keep the upper hand and freight, farming, and industry take the hit. A quick turnaround in stocks puts fuel buyers in control.

Roman Perkowski is a senior markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and macroeconomic trends. A graduate of the Cracow University of Economics, he previously worked in investment research and corporate finance. His coverage helps readers understand the key forces driving global financial markets and emerging industries.

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