Published 2026-04-09 | Version v1.0
Policy BriefOpenPublished

Russia–Iran Northern Supply Capacity

A Three-Channel Assessment of Sustained Throughput Under Constraint

Description

This policy brief evaluates Russia–Iran logistical connectivity through northern routes under sustained strategic pressure. It assesses Caspian maritime shipping, Central Asian rail transit, and overland trucking as a constrained but durable three-channel logistics network that functions as a threshold-delaying sustainment system rather than a high-volume surge architecture.

Abstract

Russia’s northern routes to Iran provide a constrained but persistent supply system under conditions of geopolitical pressure and partial maritime denial. This policy brief assesses the capacity, structural resilience, and strategic effects of three primary channels: Caspian maritime shipping, Central Asian rail transit, and overland trucking. The analysis estimates aggregate throughput at approximately 3,800–29,000 tons per day, with a realistic working range of 10,000–15,000 tons per day under constrained conditions. The central finding is that the system is not a replacement for Persian Gulf-scale maritime logistics and cannot support high-intensity wartime surge requirements. Instead, it functions as a threshold-delaying sustainment network that preserves continuity, absorbs partial disruption, enables selected replenishment, moderates escalation speed, and redistributes conflict costs over time. For policymakers, the core issue is not whether northern supply exists, but whether steady-state throughput can be degraded through selective disruption of key bottlenecks such as Caspian ports, rail transshipment nodes, and border-processing interfaces.

Files

PDF preview

Keywords

  • Russia–Iran logistics
  • Northern supply capacity
  • Caspian maritime transport
  • Central Asian rail transit
  • Overland trucking
  • Sustainment network
  • Threshold-delaying logistics
  • Throughput under constraint
  • Persian Gulf access
  • Partial maritime denial
  • Logistics resilience
  • Strategic supply corridors
  • Multi-channel redundancy
  • Node concentration
  • Channel coupling
  • Nonlinear disruption
  • Loss-of-Control Threshold
  • LoCT
  • Middle East conflict
  • MCCM
  • Escalation dynamics
  • Cost redistribution
  • Iran
  • Russia
  • EPINOVA

Subjects

  • Strategic studies
  • International security
  • Logistics and supply chains
  • Maritime security
  • Caspian Sea
  • Russia–Iran relations
  • Middle East conflict
  • Escalation management
  • Critical infrastructure
  • Geopolitical risk
  • Transportation corridors
  • Network resilience
  • Policy analysis
  • Security studies
  • Conflict systems analysis

Recommended citation

Wu, Shaoyuan (2026), Russia–Iran Northern Supply Capacity: A Three-Channel Assessment of Sustained Throughput Under Constraint, Policy Brief No. EPINOVA–2026–PB–27, Global AI Governance and Policy Research Center, EPINOVA LLC, https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19476666. DOI: To be assigned after Crossref membership approval.

APA citation

Wu, S. (2026). Russia–Iran northern supply capacity: A three-channel assessment of sustained throughput under constraint (Policy Brief No. EPINOVA–2026–PB–27). Global AI Governance and Policy Research Center, EPINOVA LLC. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19476666. DOI: To be assigned after Crossref membership approval.

Alternate identifiers

SchemeIdentifierDescription
DOI10.5281/zenodo.19476666Zenodo/DataCite DOI stated in the PDF recommended citation
DOI10.5281/zenodo.19476665Earlier DOI from ORCID-derived metadata record retained for reconciliation
ORCID put-code211120814ORCID Public API record identifier from early metadata
EPINOVA policy brief numberEPINOVA–2026–PB–27Policy brief number printed in the PDF
File nameRussia–Iran Northern Supply Capacity A Three-Channel Assessment of Sustained Throughput Under Constraint.pdfSource PDF file name
Short titleRussia–Iran Northern Supply CapacityShort form of the policy brief title

Related works

RelationIdentifierTypeDescription
Preceding EPINOVA policy brief on ceasefire as a competitive interval for capability recovery and network disruption under non-enforcement conditions10.5281/zenodo.19464642
Later EPINOVA policy brief expanding the logistics analysis beyond the Gulf and identifying three-channel threshold-delaying systems under sustained pressure10.5281/zenodo.19562154
Related EPINOVA policy brief on Iran’s broader logistics adaptation under blockade pressure and multi-corridor routing logic
Related EPINOVA policy brief on system disruption, throughput stress, and Caspian logistics dynamics after strikes against northern supply infrastructure10.5281/zenodo.19681411

References

No references listed.