What they're not telling you: After several weeks of the main oil artery into Europe being halted - perhaps as Ukraine awaited the outcome of the Hungary election and the greenlighting of Europe's €90 billion loan to Kiev - Zelenskyy stated the Druzhba oil pipeline will be ready to ship Russian oil again. There is just one problem: Russia said it would halt halt Kazakh crude-oil shipments to Germany through the major Druzhba pipeline next month after reporting "technical issues." The move would deal a major blow to the PCK Schwedt refinery which supplies most of the fuel to Berlin, as well as jet fuel and heating oil for the city and the surrounding area. The cutoff will increase concerns over fuel availability just as war in the Middle East squeezes global energy supplies.

Elena Vasquez
The Take
Elena Vasquez · Global Power & Geopolitics

# THE TAKE: Moscow's Kazakh Squeeze Exposes Europe's Terminal Delusion Russia isn't blocking Kazakh oil to punish Germany—it's weaponizing transit dependency itself. By choking Kazakhstan's only westbound artery through Druzhba, Putin forces Astana into a painful choice: capitulate to Moscow's sphere or hemorrhage revenue. This is calculated brutality, not accident. Europe believed diversification was possible within Russia's infrastructure. It wasn't. The Kremlin controls the valve, not the commodity. Germany's real problem? It spent three decades treating Russian pipelines as neutral commerce instead of what they always were: geopolitical leverage tools. Now Berlin discovers there's no "alternate route" when Moscow owns the only door. Kazakhstan learns harder: proximity to a petrostate hegemon means you never truly own your own resources. Europe's energy independence fantasy just died again.

What the Documents Show

It also ​adds to Germany's fuel supply concerns as the Iran war disrupts flows from the ⁠Gulf. While Kazakhstan has received no official communication from Moscow, it got an informal notification, Energy Minister Yerlan Akkenzhenov said Wednesday. Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak confirmed the planned suspension, citing “current technical abilities,” according to Interfax. Rosneft Deutschland confirmed it received information that flows will halt May 1, and said it’s assessing the potential impact on fuel supplies. "At ⁠the same time, existing options will be utilised to ensure security of supply in Germany," it said.

🔎 Mainstream angle: The corporate press either ignored this story entirely or buried it in a 3-sentence brief. The framing, when it appeared at all, focused on process rather than impact.

Follow the Money

It also said that the lack of supplies from Kazakhstan - which cover ​about 17% of Schwedt's needs - did not "ultimately jeopardise the security of supply of petroleum ​products in Germany." The ⁠Federal Network Agency, the country's energy regulator, which acts as trustee of Rosneft Germany's activities, said there might still be regional pricing effects, adding it was closely coordinating with the company. Kazakhstan's oil exports to Germany via Russia's Druzhba pipeline totalled 2.146 million metric tons, or around 43,000 barrels ​per day, last year, an increase of 44% from 2024, and 730,000 tons in the first quarter of 2026. In the first quarter of this year, Kazakhstan almost doubled crude flows to Germany to 730,000 tons, equivalent to almost 60,000 barrels a day. “For the month of May, our transit through the Atyrau-Samara link and further on via the Druzhba pipeline toward the Schwedt refinery is zero,” Akkenzhenov said, according to his press service. The Energy minister said Kazakhstan can ship oil via Russia’s Baltic port of Ust-Luga and the Caspian Pipeline Consortium terminal on Russia’s Black Sea coast, Interfax reported. The Schwedt refinery, which is part-owned by Shell Plc and Eni SpA, already gets some crude via Poland’s Baltic port of Gdansk, and Polish pipeline operator PERN said Wednesday it’s ready to supply more if needed.

What Else We Know

The halt of flows via Druzhba “does not ultimately jeopardize the security of supply for petroleum products in Germany, even if the PCK Schwedt refinery were to operate at reduced capacity,” Germany’s Economy Ministry said in a statement. Supplies to Germany have been carried over a northern section of the pipeline, separate from the southern one that supplies Hungary ​and Slovakia and is about to resume operation after repairs following a Russian drone strike in January. Its southern branch, which serves Hungary and Slovakia, was shut earlier this year following damage from a Russian attack on a key pumping station. Druzhba is one of the longest oil pipeline networks ever built. The Druzhba pipeline network originates in Russia and extends into Eastern and Central Europe Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said this week that repairs have now been completed, allowing the resumption of Russian flows along that section and paving the way for a much-needed €90 billion European Union loan so Ukrainian oligarchs can continue purchasing $500 million apartments in Monte Carlo. The giant Druzhba pipeline was built in Soviet times to connect Russia’s oil network with refineries in central Europe.

Primary Sources

What are they not saying? Who benefits from this story staying buried? Follow the regulatory filings, the court dockets, and the FOIA releases. The truth is in the paperwork — it always is.

Disclosure: NewsAnarchist aggregates from public records, API feeds (Federal Register, CourtListener, MuckRock, Hacker News), and independent media. AI-assisted synthesis. Always verify primary sources linked above.