So the government has finally done it: a grand, righteous ban on Russian jet fuel imports. Cue the applause from the chattering classes, the self-congratulatory op-eds, and the solemn nods from our European cousins. But let us pause, for once, and examine the wreckage this noble gesture will leave in its wake. We are not merely shifting suppliers; we are tearing up the global energy chessboard without a plan for the next move. This is not statesmanship. It is a theatrical gesture that will cost the taxpayer, punish the airline industry, and achieve precisely nothing in terms of pressuring Moscow.
First, the numbers. Russia supplied roughly a fifth of the world’s jet fuel pre-sanctions. Our island nation, already reeling from inflated energy costs, now must scramble for alternatives from the Middle East, Asia, and the United States. The logistics are a nightmare: refineries are not interchangeable, contracts are not renegotiated overnight, and spot markets will spike the moment demand outstrips supply. Within months, we will see ticket prices soar, routes cancelled, and cargo operations slashed. The era of cheap global travel, already gasping after the pandemic, will receive its final blow.
But the deeper tragedy is intellectual. We have convinced ourselves that banning Russian goods is a moral victory, a cleansing of the national conscience. Nonsense. It is a feel-good policy that ignores the reality of interdependence. The Victorians understood trade as a web of mutual self-interest; we treat it as a weapon. And like all such weapons, it cuts both ways. Russia will simply sell its fuel to China and India, our so-called rivals, who will grin and pocket the discount. We, meanwhile, will pay a premium to keep our planes in the air, funding not just American exporters but also the very energy infrastructure that keeps the global cartel afloat.
Consider the historical parallel. When Rome banned trade with the Parthian Empire for political reasons, it did not break Parthia. It enriched the middlemen, drove up prices for Roman citizens, and fostered a black market that made a few merchants absurdly wealthy. Sound familiar? We are Rome on the verge of decadence: loudly moralising while our empire decays from within. The jet fuel ban is a perfect symbol of this decline. It satisfies the public’s thirst for symbolic victories while doing nothing to address the root problem: our addiction to cheap energy and our inability to admit that we cannot simply wish away the geopolitics of supply.
And what of our aviation partners? The article mentions they are ‘bracing for change’. How quaint. They are bracing for chaos. Airlines that invested in long-haul routes to Asia and the Middle East will find themselves at the mercy of volatile spot prices. Carriers that hedged fuel costs will watch those hedges evaporate. The British taxpayer, already burdened with higher taxes, will inevitably foot the bill through subsidies or state-backed loan guarantees for a flagship airline. We are nationalising risk while privateering the profits.
But let us not forget the grand irony. The very same government that lectures us about energy independence and climate change is now scrambling to buy fuel from regimes with even worse human rights records than Russia’s. The Saudis, the Emirates, the Kazakhs: all will be happy to fill the gap, and they will demand political concessions in return. So much for moral foreign policy. We are trading one set of dependencies for another, and calling it progress.
I am not arguing that we should continue funding Putin’s war. I am arguing that we should think before we act. A serious government would have quietly diversified its fuel supply over years, built strategic reserves, and presented the ban as a culmination of careful planning. Instead, we have a knee-jerk gesture that will hurt us more than it hurts Russia. That is the mark of a nation that has lost its nerve and its ingenuity.
We are entering a period of enforced austerity masked as moral clarity. The jet fuel crisis is just the beginning. Expect more of these bans, more disruptions, and more self-righteous speeches from politicians who have never run a business or balanced a budget. And expect the public to applaud, because it feels good to do something, even if that something is foolish.
In the end, this is not about energy policy. It is about a culture that values performance over substance, gesture over strategy. We are becoming a nation of actors, not statesmen. And the bill for our histrionics will arrive with the next fuel surcharge.
So fasten your seat belts. The turbulence ahead will not be caused by weather. It will be caused by the people who are supposed to be at the controls.








