THE HALFAX HEIMDALL AUGUR

2026-07-10 05:18:21 UTC

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Non-primary non-energy exports - TAdviser.ru
Non-primary non-energy exports - TAdviser.ru Main article:Russian Foreign Trade Non-primary non-energy exports are supplies of primary crop products (grains, vegetables, fruits), chemicals, fertilizers, processed stone, cast iron and steel, non-ferrous and precious metals. This list also includes mechanical engineering products, pharmaceutical products, low-complexity finished products (flour, cereals, vegetable oils), household chemicals, clothes and shoes. At the end of 2025, the volume of non-resource non-energy exports ofRussiaincreased by almost 9.5% and approached 13 trillionrubles. This was stated by Russian Prime MinisterMikhail Mishustinduring a government report in theState Dumaon February 25, 2026. According to the head of the Cabinet of Ministers, the share of friendly states in the structure of non-resource non-energy exports reached 86%. Mishustin stressed that the increase in indicators occurred despite attempts to block trade withRussia. As Anastasia Prizkova, Associate Professor of the Department of International Business of the Russian Academy of NaturalSciences named after G.V. Plekhanova, explained, the positive dynamics is primarily associated with an incr…
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Russia's Top Exports 2025
Russia's Top Exports 2025 by Flagpictures.org Occupying Northern Asia and a large part of Eastern Europe thus making Russia the world’s biggest area by geographic area, Russia shipped US$359.7 billion worth of exported products around the globe in 2025. That projected dollar metric results from a -26.9% slowdown compared to $492.3 billion five years earlier in 2021. Year over year, the total value of Russian exports dropped by -12.2% from $409.7 billion for 2024. Based on the average exchange rate for 2025, the Russian ruble depreciated by -11.2% against the US dollar from 2024 to 2025. The Russian Federation’s weaker local currency makes Russian exports paid for in stronger US dollars relatively less expensive for international buyers starting from American currency. Russia’s 5 most valuable export products in 2025 were crude oil, refined petroleum oils, petroleum gases, coal and unwrought gold. In aggregate, those major exports accounted for 58.1% of overall exports sales from Russia. Such a high percentage suggests that the Russian Federation distributes a relatively concentrated range of exported goods on global markets. Russia is a world leader for exporting wheat and ranks a…
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Most Profitable Products to Export from Russia Right Now
Most Profitable Products to Export from Russia Right Now Profitable Products to Export from Russia Despite Western sanctions, Russia remains a major global supplier of key commodities—but the most profitable exports have shifted due to trade restrictions and new market demands. This guide reveals the top high-margin products to export from Russia in 2025-2026 , along with the best buyer countries and payment strategies. 1. Energy & Fuel: Still Russia’s #1 Money-Maker A. Crude Oil & Petroleum Products Why Profitable? Russia sells oil at $15-$30 below market price , attracting India, China, and Türkiye. “Shadow fleet” tankers bypass G7 price caps. Best Buyers: China (1.8M+ barrels/day) India (1.5M+ barrels/day, refining for EU re-exports) Türkiye, UAE, Egypt (re-export hubs) Key Challenge: High shipping costs due to sanctions. B. Natural Gas (LNG & Pipeline) Why Profitable? Europe still buys some gas via Türkiye and Central Asia . China pays in yuan , avoiding sanctions. Best Buyers: China (Power of Siberia pipeline) Türkiye (transit hub for EU-bound gas) India, Pakistan (spot LNG purchases) 2. Metals & Minerals: High Demand in Asia A. Palladium & Platinum Why Profitable? Russia pro…
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What India Exports to Russia 2026: $4.88B Trade Guide
What India Exports to Russia 2026: $4.88B Trade Guide India’s exports to Russia reached$4.88 billion in 2024-25, representing a dramatic transformation in bilateral economic relations driven by geopolitical shifts and Russia’s import substitution strategy following Western sanctions. While India imports$67.15 billion from Russia(primarily crude oil, fertilizers, and defense equipment), the export side shows remarkable diversification across10 major product categoriesled by machinery ($557 million), pharmaceuticals ($520 million), ceramics ($160 million), and agricultural products including rice, seafood, tea, and spices ($356 million combined). The Indian government has identified300 additional products with high export potential to Russia, currently valued at just $1.7 billion compared to Russia’s total imports of $37.4 billion in these categories, representing a$35.7 billion untapped opportunityas both nations work toward their$100 billion bilateral trade target by 2030.​ This guide provides a detailed breakdown ofIndia’s current export basket to Russia, high-growth opportunity sectors (pharmaceuticals, engineering, agriculture), payment mechanisms (Rupee-Rouble settlement elim…
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EAEU, China, India, Turkey lead in importing Russian non-resource goods — Cabinet
EAEU, China, India, Turkey lead in importing Russian non-resource goods — Cabinet According to Roman Chekushov, State Secretary and Deputy Minister of Industry and Trade, Russia's non-commodity, non-energy exports increased by nearly 10% year-on-year between January and April 2026, totaling approximately $54 billion
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Sanctioned Sector Analysis: Russian Shipping
Sanctioned Sector Analysis: Russian Shipping The Russian shipping sector includes services relating to maritime transport, as well as port infrastructure and military and civilian shipbuilding. As of 2023, the size of Russia’s merchant marine ranked ninth in the world with 2,910 vessels consisting of 15 bulk carriers, 20 container ships, 976 general cargo ships, 387 oil tankers, and 1,512 ships of other types. Maritime shipping is critical to Russia’s heavily-sanctioned energy sector. A majority of Russian oil exports are transported by sea, as are most of Russia’s exports of liquified natural gas (LNG). Current trends in Russia’s shipping sector include efforts to evade or mitigate the impact of sanctions by connecting to new markets for Russian oil and establishing alternate supply chains for export-controlled goods. The Russian government also uses maritime shipping for military logistics and to import arms in support of its war against Ukraine. Ports make up the sector’s basic infrastructure. Russia has 67 total ports, the most prominent being Kaliningrad, Saint Petersburg, and Vyborg in the Baltic Sea basin, Arkhangelsk, Dudinka, and Murmansk in the Arctic Ocean basin, Novoro…
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Russia Import Data | Global Trade Data & Intelligence
Russia Import Data | Global Trade Data & Intelligence Russia is the world's most dynamic and structurally changing import market. With an estimated value of over $280 billion, this market is rapidly shifting away from European suppliers and toward deeper integration with Asian, Middle Eastern, and CIS manufacturing centers. Get verified, shipment-level information on parallel imports, new transit corridors, and the overall transformation of Russia's inbound supply chain. Russia's import landscape has undergone unprecedented changes. Faced with restrictions on Western markets, Russia has aggressively reoriented its supply chains toward China, India, and Southeast Asia to secure supplies of essential industrial machinery, electronics, and consumer goods. To sustain domestic consumption and industrial output, new logistical arteries have emerged. Countries like Turkey, the UAE, and EAEU members (Kazakhstan, Belarus, Armenia) now serve as critical transit and re-export hubs for goods entering the Russian Federation. Russia is heavily importing Asian manufacturing equipment, heavy machinery, and automotive components to replace departing Western brands. Tracking these imports reveal…
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Mapping Russian Investment in India - Observer Research Foundation
Mapping Russian Investment in India - Observer Research Foundation Isolation from the West has forced Russia to reach out to the Global South. Its trade with India, for example, saw a remarkable rise in FY2024-25, driven by increased imports by India, primarily of crude oil. To work around US, UK, and EU sanctions imposed on Russia, the two countries have resorted to the rupee–ruble settlement facilitated by the Reserve Bank of India’s (RBI) decision in July 2022 to allow export and import operations in Indian currency. As a result, Russian companies have become more engaged with the Indian market, a process that has been further aided by the integration of Russian banks into the Indian financial system. This brief examines the current status of and potential for Russian investment in India, identifying areas and mechanisms of economic cooperation alongside existing challenges to promoting bilateral ties. Aleksei Zakharov, “Mapping Russian Investment in India,”ORF Issue Brief No. 865, Observer Research Foundation, March 2026. Since 2022, bilateral trade volumes between Russia and India have far surpassed the target of US$30 billion set by the two countries in 2015. In FY2024–25,…

Corroboration

rendered 3d ago · 2 items considered across 2 blocs · model Qwen3-Next-80B-A3B-Instruct

No verdict, no pronouncement. The model extracts atomic factual claims with verbatim quotes; every quote is validated against the source text and corroboration is computed by counting how many editorially-opposed blocs assert each fact. 2 fabricated/unverifiable quotes were rejected by the cite-or-die gate.

The spine · 0 facts corroborated across ≥2 opposed blocs

No fact in this cluster crossed two opposed editorial blocs. The facts below are reported, but not (yet) independently corroborated across the divide.

Single-source · 4 — reported by one bloc only (uncorroborated)

Russia's non-commodity, non-energy exports increased by nearly 10% year-on-year between January and April 2026, totaling approximately $54 billion.
tass
The share of friendly states in the structure of Russia's non-resource non-energy exports reached 86%.
tadviser.com
The EAEU, China, India, and Turkey lead in importing Russian non-resource goods.
tass
Non-primary non-energy exports are supplies of primary crop products (grains, vegetables, fruits), chemicals, fertilizers, processed stone, cast iron and steel, non‑ferrous and precious metals, mechanical engineering products, pharmaceutical products, low‑complexity finished products (flour, cereals, vegetable oils), household chemicals, clothes and shoes.
tadviser.com

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Russiaplace Indiaplace Turkeyplace Chinaplace Cabinetorg Russian Shippingvessel Observer Research Foundationorg EAEUplace TAdviserorg Global Trade Data & Intelligenceorg

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