2025-12-12 00:00:00 Ukraina mengatakan drone jarak jauhnya telah menyerang anjungan minyak lepas pantai utama di Laut Kaspia, ketika Ukraina berupaya memotong pendapatan energi Rusia yang mendanai perangnya.
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Follow Ukraine said Thursday its long-range drones had struck a major offshore oil platform in the Caspian Sea this week, in a previously undisclosed mission that signals a new expansion of its target list in a mounting campaign to cut off the Russian energy revenues funding its war.
âThis is Ukraineâs first strike on Russian infrastructure related to oil production in the Caspian Sea,â a source with the Security Service of Ukraine told Berita, calling it âanother reminder to Russia that all its enterprises working for the war are legitimate targets.â The Filanovsky oil platform, owned by Lukoil, claims to be the largest oil field in the Russian sector of the Caspian.
Berita has reached out to Lukoil and the Russian Ministry of Defense for comment.
Ukraineâs deep strike campaign against Russian energy facilities began in earnest in early 2024, but since the beginning of August, Kyiv has escalated this effort, doubling down on what Ukraineâs sanctions commissioner Vladyslav Vlasiuk calls âlong-range sanctionsâ targeting Russiaâs biggest financial lifeline.
Ukraine is now hitting an increasingly broad range of targets including not just refineries but oil and gas export infrastructure, pipelines, tankers, and now offshore drilling infrastructure.
November saw the highest number of attacks yet in a single month, according to data from the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data (ACLED) project, and Beritaâs analysis.
It comes at a critical juncture in the war.
Recent US-led peace efforts only appear to have hardened Russiaâs maximalist demands, and Moscowâs forces are creeping forward in several areas of the front line.
That, along with a global oil supply glut cushioning the market against potential price rises, means Ukraineâs Western allies have grown increasingly supportive of this campaign.
âI think the general strategy since summer is the idea that you cannot allow Russia to retain so much of its critical energy revenue that has been fuelling the massive manpower recruitment advantage that Moscow has over Ukraine,â said Helima Croft, global head of commodity strategy at RBC Capital Markets, referring to Russiaâs ability to pay high salaries and sign-on bonuses to recruit soldiers.
âSo, I do think itâs a more systematic effort to sort of close that energy ATM.â Repeated attacks, bigger targets Between the beginning of August and the end of November, Ukraine struck at least 77 Russian energy facilities, almost twice the total for the first seven months of the year, according to the ACLED.
In November at least 14 refinery hits and four attacks on Russian export terminals were recorded.
Striking the same facilities multiple times is now a key part of the strategy.
The Rosneft-owned Saratov refinery, for example, has been hit at least eight times since the beginning of August, with four of those strikes in November.
âWhat used to be occasional strikes meant to cause damage has become a sustained effort to keep refineries from ever fully stabilising,â wrote Nikhil Dubey, senior refining analyst at data and analytics firm Kpler, in early December.
Dubeyâs research shows that repeated strikes on Russian refineries like Saratov have knocked a significant amount of capacity offline and are âslowing the pace of every repair.â He also assesses that since August, Kyiv has been trying to maximize the impact of its refinery strikes, by targeting not just âthe visible parts of the refinery but the important clogs in the refining system that produce the final fuels.â Sergey Vakulenko, a senior fellow at the Berlin-based Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center think tank, who spent 25 years in the Russian oil and gas industry, told Berita he believes the up- front damage Ukraine has inflicted has been manageable for Moscow so far, but that does not account for the long-term damage from the large-scale fires these attacks tend to cause.
âMetals are not particularly fond of that kind of treatment, and nobody really knows how many of these cycles of heating by fire and cooling down these columns could survive,â he told Berita.
The pattern of attacks also suggests Ukraine is no longer trying to limit the impact to just Russiaâs domestic energy market.
Since August, it has markedly increased strikes on Russian oil export facilities.
A satellite image shows an overview of a damaged oil facility at Russia's Novorossiysk Port after a Ukrainian missile and drone attack, in Novorossiysk, Russia, on November 16, 2025.
Vantor/Reuters The ports of Novorossiysk and Tuapse on the Black Sea and Ust-Luga on the Baltic have each been hit several times.
And pipelines are also in play.
The Druzhba pipeline carrying Russian oil to the few remaining EU countries that rely on it has now been hit five times since August, triggering protests from Hungary, which remains on good terms with Moscow.
In late November, the Caspian Pipeline Consortium, which ferries 80% of all Kazakh oil supplies from Kazakhstan to the Black Sea, said it had been attacked twice in four days.
The pipeline company, jointly owned by Russia, Kazakhstan and international oil companies including Exxon (XOM), Chevron (CVX) and Eni, said the second strike had knocked out one of its three mooring points for tankers.
Ukraine never officially claimed responsibility for the strike.
The entire terminal shut down for two days, according to Homayoun Falakshahi, head of crude oil analysis at Kpler.
The Kazakh foreign minister called it âan action harming the bilateral relations of the Republic of Kazakhstan and Ukraine.â Vakulenko believes this shows the risks of this expanding campaign.
âI guess Ukraine wants to instil fear and wants to make it expensive for any oil tankers going into the Black Sea,â he said, but added: âI think with this, Ukraine doesnât earn any sympathies and might incur some costs.â A Ukrainian sea drone shows the Dashan, a sanctioned oil tanker, being struck by another sea drone in the Black Sea on Tuesday, in a still from a video shared by Ukraine's Security Service.
Security Service/Reuters Ukraine is undeterred.
On Wednesday it carried out its third attack on another critical link in Russiaâs oil supply chain â the ships that carry it to global markets.
A source in Ukraineâs security service claimed sea drones had been used to attack a sanctioned oil tanker in the Black Sea, heading for Novorossiysk.
The first two attacks on tankers in late November triggered a rare response from Putin, who called it âpiracy,â and Turkey summoned both Ukrainian and Russian ambassadors in protest.
âWe have no other tool than to cut money flow to Russia to prevent this war for existence,â said Oleksandr Kharchenko, director of the Energy Industry Research Centre in Kyiv.
The fact these sanctioned vessels were there in the first place, he argued, clearly demonstrates Western sanctions are inadequate.
âSo guys, if you canât deliver your sanctions, maybe someone (can) help you,â he said.
Western support Two external factors have allowed Ukraine to ramp up its energy attacks in recent months.
First, a dramatic about-turn by the United States.
âIt is very hard, if not impossible, to win a war without attacking an invaderâs country,â wrote US President Trump on Truth Social in late August.
In October, two sources told Berita the US had increased intelligence sharing with Ukraine after the abortive Alaska summit between Trump and Putin, with a focus on energy-related targets inside Russia, hoping to force Russia back to the negotiating table.
Europe was also on board.
âBy the end of summer no one in the room would even mention that Ukraine should restrain from hitting any target,â noted DovilÄ Å akalienÄ, a Lithuanian parliamentarian who served as the countryâs defense minister until October this year, in written comments to Berita.
âGrowing realization in the minds of Europeans that failure of Ukraine will directly affect our security within the span of one standard parliamentary term also helped,â she added.
âThe US remains an active partner when it comes to Ukraineâs deep strikes on Russian energy targets, while European allies have stepped up their involvement,â a source with Ukraineâs drone program told Berita.
The second big tailwind for Ukraine has been falling oil prices driven by a global oversupply.
Croft, from RBC Capital Markets, said she âjust couldnât envision that the Trump administration, which has been so focused on lower retail gasoline pricesâ would be âso supportiveâ of Ukraineâs attacks on Russian energy if oil prices were high.
A Western intelligence source told Berita that Ukraine is getting extra support in this campaign âas neededâ and âthe goal is for these attacks to have consequences.â The global oil markets can âtake it,â the source added.
How long can Russia withstand this?
While Russia remains intransigent in peace talks, its oil sector â the single biggest financial pillar of its war â is looking much shakier than a year ago.
Russiaâs oil refineries are processing about 6% less oil than they were this time last year, according to Kpler analyst Dubey.
While that number may look small, it is disruptive for the Russians because âthey usually run with only a small gasoline surplus,â Dubey said.
Cars line up to buy fuel at a gas station in Vladivostok, Russia, on August 22, 2025.
Tatiana Meel/Reuters In September and October this year, videos of cars lining up outside gas stations surfaced online and Russiaâs government, facing shortages in some regions, moved to ban gasoline exports until the end of the year.
At the end of November, Putin signed a law allowing Russian companies to receive a subsidy if they refine oil at Belarusian refineries and then import it back to Russia, state media reported, a measure designed to stabilize the domestic market.
Ukraineâs escalating attacks have also coincided with the first new sanctions imposed on Russia since Trump returned to office in January.
In October, Trump announced full blocking sanctions on Russiaâs biggest oil companies â Rosneft and Lukoil.
Related article A Lukoil logo at a gas station in Moscow on October 28.
Olesya Kurpyayeva/AFP/Getty Images Russian oil firmâs multibillion-dollar assets overseas at risk as US sanctions begin to bite Prices for Russian Urals crude have gradually fallen since then to around their lowest point in the war so far, according to data from Argus Media, helping fuel a drop in Russian oil export revenues to their lowest point since February 2022, according to the International Energy Agency.
In November, state media reported Russiaâs oil and natural gas revenues fell almost 34% compared with the same month last year.
Vakulenko believes the attacks on Russian energy facilities are just âone of the elements of the puzzleâ of how to pressure Putin to seek peace.
âI think the amount of economic damage one has to inflict on Russia is probably more than Ukraine could create at the moment,â he said.
âI believe that if push comes to shove, Russia could probably survive with half of its oil and gas exports.â For Croft, itâs a question of whether Ukraine and its allies can stay the course.
âThe combination of infrastructure attacks focused on export targets, and the staying power of blocking sanctions, I think that could potentially drive Russia back to the table, but it has to be a longer duration event,â she said.
With Trump now pressuring Ukraine to accept concessions, this may be a test of his appetite to do both.
Beritaâs Saskya Vandoorne, Victoria Butenko, Lou Robinson and Anna Chernova contributed to this report Russia Oil & gas War in Ukraine Donald Trump See all topics Facebook Tweet Email Link Link Copied!
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