Russia pledges further oil supplies to Cuba after dispatching crude cargo

Published 15 Apr, 2026 01:12pm 2 min read
Russian-flagged oil tanker Anatoly Kolodkin arrives at the Matanzas bay, Cuba, whose economy has ground to a halt under a de facto oil blockade imposed by Washington, resulting in an energy crisis that has led to strict gasoline rationing and a series of blackouts across the country of 10 million people. – Reuters
Russian-flagged oil tanker Anatoly Kolodkin arrives at the Matanzas bay, Cuba, whose economy has ground to a halt under a de facto oil blockade imposed by Washington, resulting in an energy crisis that has led to strict gasoline rationing and a series of blackouts across the country of 10 million people. – Reuters

Russia will continue helping fuel-hungry Cuba with crucial supplies of oil, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Wednesday, two weeks after Moscow sent a tanker with ​around 700,000 barrels of crude to the Caribbean island.

Washington stopped oil ​exports to Cuba from its main ally Venezuela after capturing ⁠Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro on January 3, triggering acute fuel shortages ​across the communist-ruled island of almost 11 million people.

President Donald Trump has ​threatened to impose punishing tariffs on countries sending crude to Cuba as he seeks to put pressure on the government. The US later allowed the Russian oil delivery to Cuba, this ​year’s first by Moscow, for humanitarian reasons.

Another major supplier, Mexico, halted ​its shipments.

Lavrov, on a visit to China, said Russia will provide humanitarian aid to ‌Cuba, ⁠its long-standing ally.

“We have dispatched the first tanker with 100,000 tons (700,000 barrels) of oil for Cuba. Of course, this will probably last for a couple of months - I’m not a specialist,” he told a briefing at ​the end of the ​two-day visit.

“But ⁠I have no doubt that we will continue providing such assistance, and that (China) will, of course, continue to ​take part in this cooperation as well,” added Lavrov, ​without referring ⁠to the issue of US permission or not for future deliveries.

Cuba produces less than a third of the oil it requires.

Though it cleared the recent ⁠Russian ​delivery, the Trump administration said it would ​review further oil shipments to Cuba on a “case-by-case” basis.

Lavrov said he hoped the US would not ​return to times of “colonial wars.”

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