How Australia’s ‘blood oil’ imports are funding Russia’s war

Today, chair of the Australian Federation of Ukrainian Organisations, Kateryna Argyrou, on how Australia’s “blood oil” imports are helping to prolong the war.

Dec 04, 2025, updated Dec 04, 2025

Since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine almost four years ago, Australian leaders have repeatedly stated that Australia “stands with Ukraine”.

But as the invasion has intensified – with nightly missile and drone attacks, rolling blackouts and water cuts across Ukrainian cities – Australia’s support has slowed.

The federal government hasn’t announced a fresh package of aid since December last year, making us one of the least generous donors to Kyiv.

At the same time, Australia has become one of the biggest buyers of fuel made from Russian oil, which is refined in third countries and imported through loopholes in sanctions. Ukrainian community groups call it “blood oil”, warning that billions of Australian dollars are flowing back to the Kremlin – more than Australia has given Ukraine in aid.

Today, chair of the Australian Federation of Ukrainian Organisations, Kateryna Argyrou, on how Australia’s “blood oil” imports are helping to prolong the war.

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