Russian oil tanker Cuba – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Mon, 30 Mar 2026 17:07:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/cropped-cropped-app-logo-32x32.png Russian oil tanker Cuba – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 Russia ‘glad’ oil cargo reached its ally Cuba amid U.S. blockade https://artifex.news/article70804256-ece/ Mon, 30 Mar 2026 17:07:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70804256-ece/ Read More “Russia ‘glad’ oil cargo reached its ally Cuba amid U.S. blockade” »

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“This issue was indeed raised in advance during our contacts with our American counterparts,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters, without providing more details. File.
| Photo Credit: Reuters

Russia is pleased that a shipment of its oil reached Cuba, the Kremlin said on Monday (March 30, 2026), after U.S. President Donald Trump said he was not bothered by the delivery despite Washington’s de facto blockade of the island.

Russia sent the Anatoly Kolodkin, a sanctioned oil tanker carrying 7,30,000 barrels of crude, to Cuba earlier this month as the Communist-run island grappled with fuel shortages.

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Shipping data showed it sailing off Cuba’s northeast coast on Monday (March 30, 2026) but it was not immediately clear whether it had docked at a port.

Russia is a close ally of Havana and has criticised Washington for blocking fuel deliveries to the island.

“Russia considers it its duty to step up and provide necessary assistance to our Cuban friends,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters.

“We are pleased that this shipment of petroleum products will arrive on the island, or rather, it has already arrived,” he added.

The shipment of oil would be the first to Havana since January, when U.S. forces abducted Venezuelan President and Cuban ally Nicolas Maduro in a raid.

Mr. Maduro’s removal deprived Cuba of its main oil supplier and triggered an energy crisis on the island, sending fuel prices soaring and triggering daily blackouts.

Mr. Trump said on Sunday (March 29, 2026) he had “no problem” with Russia sending oil to the island.

“Cuba’s finished. They have a bad regime. They have very bad and corrupt leadership and whether or not they get a boat of oil is not going to matter,” he said.

Also read: Oil, power, and politics of disruption

The Kremlin’s Peskov said Moscow and Washington had been in touch over the shipment.

“This issue was indeed raised in advance during our contacts with our American counterparts,” he told reporters, without providing more details.



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Russian tanker heads to Cuba despite U.S. oil blockade https://artifex.news/article70801568-ece/ Mon, 30 Mar 2026 02:16:00 +0000 https://artifex.news/article70801568-ece/ Read More “Russian tanker heads to Cuba despite U.S. oil blockade” »

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A Russian oil tanker under U.S. sanctions is due to arrive in Cuba by Tuesday (March 31, 2026) despite a de facto American fuel blockade of the energy-starved island, according to shipping data.

The Anatoly Kolodkin, which is carrying 730,000 barrels of crude, was off the eastern tip of Cuba on Sunday (March 29), according to shipping tracker MarineTraffic.

The tanker, traveling at 12 knots, is now scheduled to arrive at the western port of Matanzas on Tuesday (March 31). It was previously forecast to arrive Monday (March 30).

It would be the first shipment of oil to the island since January, bringing some temporary relief to a country of 9.6 million people that has endured a deepening energy and economic crisis.

Communist-ruled Cuba lost its main regional ally and oil supplier in January when U.S. forces captured Venezuela’s socialist leader Nicolas Maduro.

Also read: Oil, power, and politics of disruption

U.S. President Donald Trump subsequently threatened to impose tariffs on any country sending oil to Cuba and has mused about “taking” the island.

He renewed his threats on Friday (March 27), saying “Cuba is next” at an investment forum in Miami.

Jorge Pinon, an expert on Cuba’s energy sector at the University of Texas at Austin, said he was surprised the United States did not try to intercept the Russian tanker before it approached Cuba.

“I think now the chances that the United States will try to stop her have basically disappeared,” Mr. Pinon told AFP.

Once the boat enters Cuban waters, he said, it “is almost impossible for the U.S. government to stop it.”

The New York Times, citing an unnamed U.S. official briefed on the matter, said the U.S. Coast Guard was allowing the tanker to reach Cuba.

The U.S. Coast Guard did not reply to an AFP request for comment.

Daily outages

After Washington launched the oil blockade, President Miguel Diaz-Canel imposed emergency measures to conserve fuel, including strict rationing of gasoline.

He warned this month that “any external aggressor will encounter an unbreakable resistance.”

Fuel prices have soared, public transport has dwindled and some airlines have suspended flights to Cuba, hitting the country’s fragile economy.

Cubans have endured regular outages as its aging power plants struggle to meet demand, with seven nationwide blackouts since 2024, including two this month and sparking rare protests.

A humanitarian aid convoy brought more than 50 tonnes of medicine, food, solar panels and other goods to Cuba by air and sea in the past week, with two sailboats bringing the last shipments from Mexico on Saturday (March 28).

The Anatoly Kolodkin, which is under U.S. sanctions, left the Russian port of Primorsk on March 8.

It was escorted by a Russian navy ship across the English Channel, but the two vessels parted ways when the tanker entered the Atlantic, according to the British Royal Navy.

Another ship that was reportedly carrying Russian diesel to Cuba, the Hong Kong-flagged Sea Horse, arrived in Venezuela instead earlier this week.

Diesel an ‘urgent need’

Once the Anatoly Kolodkin’s crude arrives in Cuba, it would take about 15-20 days to process the oil and another 5-10 days to deliver its refined products, Mr. Pinon said.

“The urgent need today in Cuba is diesel,” the former oil executive said.

The Russian shipment could be converted into 250,000 barrels of diesel, enough to cover the country’s demand for around 12.5 days, according to Mr. Pinon.

Mr. Pinon said the government would have to decide whether to use the fuel for backup power generators or for the buses, tractors and trains needed to keep the economy going for two weeks.

“If you are Diaz-Canel or somebody making the decision, you go, ‘OK, where where do I go with that diesel’?” he said.

“Do I want to generate more electricity so there are less apagones (blackouts)? Or do I want to put it in the transportation sector?”

Published – March 30, 2026 07:37 am IST



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