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UK Allows Russian-Refined Fuel Imports Amid Price Rises

Are Russian oil licences a hypocritical betrayal of Ukraine or a pragmatic move to ease the cost-of-living crisis?
UK Allows Russian-Refined Fuel Imports Amid Price Rises
Above: An oil rig seen through the mist on the Cromarty Firth on the north-east coast of Scotland on April 24. Image credit: Andy Buchanan/AFP/Getty Images

The Spin


Pro-government narrative

Russian oil licences are a phased approach to a new sanctions package, not a rollback of existing measures, and similar approaches are used by other countries to protect consumers. Inflation is falling, the energy price cap dropped by £117 and the fuel duty cut has been extended. This government is delivering real cost-of-living relief while keeping pressure on Russia.

Government-critical narrative

Allowing Russian-refined oil imports while voting against North Sea drilling is a contradiction that undermines both energy independence and support for Ukraine. After 18 months of posturing against Putin, quietly issuing these licenses exposes a government with no consistent principles. Putin benefits while the British public pays for an incoherent energy policy.

Pro-Russia narrative

Sanctions on Russia have backfired for the West. As energy becomes more expensive in Europe amid an international oil crisis, Russia goes from strength to strength through new deals with China and beyond. The U.K. and its partners have only themselves to blame for its ideological follies.


Metaculus Prediction


Public Figures


The Controversies



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© 2026 Improve the News Foundation. All rights reserved.Version 7.4.1

© 2026 Improve the News Foundation.

All rights reserved.

Version 7.4.1