Producer
Rosneft
Largest Russian oil company; petcoke producer from Komsomolsk-on-Amur (260,000 t/yr) and Novokuibyshevsk refineries; subject to US/EU OFAC sanctions since 2022; primarily domestic Russian market supply.
2
Inputs supplied
3
Goods downstream
2
Facilities
0
Stories
What they make
2 inputs Rosneft supplies
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Goods downstream
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Where they make it
2 facilities
Rosneft Komsomolsk-on-Amur Refinery →
RUKomsomolsk-on-Amur, Khabarovsk Krai, Russia · petroleum refining
260,000 t/yr petcoke capacity; low-sulfur ~1.3%; 500km from Vanino port; primarily domestic Russian market since 2022 sanctions; Asia-Pacific access when exporting.
Rosneft Novokuibyshevsk Refinery →
RUNovokuibyshevsk, Samara Oblast, Russia · petroleum refining
Volga region refinery; produces high-sulfur petcoke; landlocked — limited export viability; sells fuel coke (low-sulfur) from Angarsk and high-sulfur from this facility per Rosneft website.
What else they do
Business segments
The company's full revenue map — where this supply-chain role fits within their broader business.
Crude Oil Production (Russia's Largest)
65%India Operations (Nayara Energy, 49.13% stake)
10%Refining & Petcoke
20%Gas & Petrochemicals
5%
Intelligence
What's known
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Did you know2023
Rosneft, a sanctioned Russian state oil company, holds ~49.13% of Nayara Energy — India's second-largest private refinery (Vadinar, Gujarat, 20 million tonne/year capacity). After Russia invaded Ukraine and Western sanctions cut Rosneft off from European oil markets, Rosneft began shipping its own discounted Ural crude directly to Nayara Energy for processing. Russia became India's single largest crude oil supplier in 2023-2024 (~1.8 million bpd, replacing Saudi Arabia). A company sanctioned by the United States vertically integrated into India to circumvent those sanctions — owning both the discounted crude supply chain and the Indian refinery that converts it into fuel for 1.4 billion people, via a country that is simultaneously a US Quad security partner.
Nayara Energy Limited ↗Origin2023
Rosneft was assembled primarily from the assets of Yukos Oil Company after the Russian state seized Yuganskneftegaz (Yukos's largest production unit) in 2004 following the arrest of Mikhail Khodorkovsky. This forced transfer of one of Russia's most valuable oil assets to a state-controlled company became a landmark case in property rights under Putin-era Russia. Rosneft later also absorbed TNK-BP (BP's Russian joint venture) in 2013 for $55B, briefly making BP Rosneft's largest minority shareholder. Following Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine, BP announced the exit of its ~$14B Rosneft stake — the biggest financial write-off associated with Western-Russian business relationships in the post-Cold War era.
Rosneft Oil Company ↗Capacity2023
Russia collectively produces approximately 10-11 million bpd of crude oil (~40% flows through Rosneft). Following 2022 sanctions, Russian crude exports restructured almost entirely away from Europe and toward India, China, and Turkey — selling at $10-20/barrel discounts to Brent. India's refinery sector transformed from ~2% Russian crude sourcing to ~40% Russian crude sourcing in two years. This price structure effectively transferred the benefit of Western sanctions from Russia to Indian consumers (cheaper fuel) and Indian refinery margins, while Russia maintained export volumes. The G7 oil price cap ($60/barrel for Russian crude) became largely unenforceable against non-G7 buyers.
Rosneft Oil Company ↗