A Chevron-chartered oil tanker was struck by a drone off Russia's Black Sea coast, the latest attack on the key Caspian Pipeline Consortium export route that handles about 1.6 million barrels of crude daily.
A drone struck the Yasa Polaris, a Chevron-chartered oil tanker used for Caspian Pipeline Consortium shipments, off Russia's Black Sea coast on Wednesday, two industry sources said, marking the latest escalation in attacks on a crude export route already running below capacity. The vessel, built in 2022 and capable of carrying about 160,000 metric tons of oil, was managed by Turkey's Yasa Holding. Chevron said it was aware of an incident involving a vessel heading to the CPC's loading facilities near the Black Sea port of Novorossiysk and confirmed the crew was safe, while exports from Kazakhstan were not affected.
"The crew is safe and we are assessing the situation," a Chevron spokesperson said, declining to comment on the extent of damage to the vessel. The two industry sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the incident, confirmed the attack but provided no details on operational status.
The CPC plans to export about 1.6 million barrels per day of CPC Blend crude in July, down from around 1.7 million bpd planned for June after drone damage to a Russian gas facility reduced output, two trading sources said. The Chevron-led Tengizchevroil oil company is the major exporter of CPC Blend crude, sourced primarily from the giant Tengiz field it operates in Kazakhstan. Ukraine has targeted the CPC oil terminal and vessels in the Black Sea multiple times since the war began in 2022. Last year, one of the single point moorings at the CPC terminal was heavily damaged in a drone attack, forcing a temporary halt to loadings.
A Geopolitical Risk Premium Returns to Crude
The attack comes as oil markets already face heightened geopolitical risk. Brent crude jumped more than 6% to a two-week high on Monday after the U.S. launched military strikes against Iran, and four oil and gas tankers turned back from the Strait of Hormuz after separate vessel attacks on Wednesday. Ukraine's military said its drones struck three refineries and multiple tankers in a night of major strikes across Russian territory.
The CPC route is one of the largest single conduits for crude from the Caspian region to global markets, handling roughly 1.2% of global oil supply. Any sustained disruption would tighten an already supply-constrained market, particularly for medium-sour crude grades that European refineries rely on. The last time a CPC mooring was damaged in November 2025, exports were disrupted for weeks, underscoring the vulnerability of the single-point mooring system at Novorossiysk.
What Comes Next
The immediate risk centers on whether the Yasa Polaris attack forces temporary loading suspensions at the CPC terminal. If loadings are halted, the 1.6 million bpd of planned July exports could face delays, tightening the medium-sour crude market and potentially widening the Brent-Dubai spread. Traders will watch for any official force majeure declaration from CPC and for Chevron's assessment of whether its Tengiz operations need to adjust output.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.