20 May 2024 | 09:24 UTC

Russian refinery damage escalates after latest Ukrainian drone strike

Highlights

Strikes affect almost 1 million b/d gross capacity

Ukraine using bigger explosives with 'steel balls' in drones

Russian oil products exports at postpandemic low

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Russian refining capacity damaged by Ukrainian drone strikes rose further over the weekend May 18-19 to almost 1 million b/d after the 70,000 b/d Slavyansk oil refinery in the southern Krasnodar region was forced offline, according to local reports.

The Slavyansk refinery -- which was previously struck on April 27 and March 17 -- was targeted by six drones May 18-19, Russia's state-run news agency TASS reported May 20, citing a company security official.

TASS quoted the security official, Eduard Trudnev, as saying that the Ukrainian drones were bigger and more powerful than in previous attacks.

"This time the drones were bigger, the charges were bigger too, and they were stuffed with steel balls," TASS cited Trudnev as saying.

TASS cited the press service of the regional administration saying, however, that no fires were recorded after the drone attack.

Slavyansk, a small export-oriented plant near the Black Sea, was last targeted three weeks previously, when an April 27 attack was suspected to have left a naphtha separation column damaged. A previous attempt on the site left a crude distillation unit and a vacuum distillation unit offline, though full operations were restored within a month.

The attack comes two days after Ukraine launched a major strike on oil infrastructure in occupied Crimea and other Russian Black Sea oil infrastructure. Drone strikes May 17 caused fires at Rosneft's 240,000 b/d Tuapse refinery, which had only recently been restarted following a previous incident in January.

Russia has alleged that French-made missiles were discovered in the Yubileiny settlement in occupied Luhansk May 20, while US artillery has been fired over Crimea, according to TASS May 20. Meanwhile, attacks deep within Russian territory continue to be conducted with domestically-produced Ukrainian drones even as its Western allies have stipulated military aid should only be used for defensive purposes.

Export impact

Combined, Russia's gross refining capacity potentially affected by drone strikes now stands at almost 1 million b/d, up from about 680,000 b/d on May 10, according to S&P Global Commodity Insights estimates.

Russian oil products exports slumped to a postpandemic low in April, according to tanker tracking data, as Moscow battles to repair its western refineries under siege from Ukrainian drones.

Russia's biggest fuel exports -- diesel and gasoil -- have continued to shrink this month, averaging 686,000 b/d to May 20, down a further 130,000 b/d from April and 405,000 b/d lower than in January, according to S&P Global Commodities at Sea.

High stock levels, in excess of 2 million mt, coupled with ample availability on the exchange floor were keeping a cap on gasoline prices in Russia's domestic market and offsetting the upside momentum linked to the expected lifting of the export ban, according to sources May 17.

Strikes on the month/ongoing damage:

Date Name Capacity (b/d) Impact Status Domestic/export focus Approximate distance from Ukrainian border Previous attacks
18-May, 19-May Slavyansk (Slavyansk Eco) 70,000 Refinery damaged by attack, units unspecified Offline Export 350 km

April 27 - suspected damage to naphtha separation column.

March 17 - CDU and VDU outages - units back online within a month

17-May IPP oil products export terminal - Operations temporarily suspended Fully operational Export 400 km
17-May Transneft Grushevaya oil depot - Gasoline storage tank damaged Partly operational Export 400 km
17-May Novorossiisk fuel oil terminal - Debris hit two fuel oil storage tanks Partly operational Export 400 km
17-May Tuapse (Rosneft) 240,000 Fire caused by downed drone, suspected to reach CDU Partly operational Black Sea export hub for refinery feedstocks 400 km Jan 25 - VDU outage due to fire. Unit brought online within around 3 months
12-May Volgograd (Lukoil) 314,000 Fire at site Partly operational - AVT-1 CDU expected back online by end of May. Planned works on CDU AVT-6 expected until June Domestic fuel source to Southern Russia, pipeline connection to Novorossiisk for diesel exports 350 km Feb 3 - CDU VDU 5 unit set fire. Unit brought online within around one month
10-May Rovenky, Luhansk oil depot - Fire at site Partly operational Domestic 110 km
10-May First Plant 24,000 Three diesel tanks and one fuel oil container set fire Partly operational Domestic 260 km
9-May Salavat (Gazprom) 200,000 Fire in FCC unit Fully operational Exports to Central Asia, Arctic, Baltic and Black Sea ports 1,300 km
9-May Krasnodar oil depot - Several storage tanks damaged Partly operational Domestic 350 km
8-May Luhansk oil depot - Fire at site Partly operational Domestic 130 km
1-May Ryazan (Rosneft) 342,000 Fire at site Partly operational - one CDU offline though production unaffected Domestic - fuel supply source to Moscow, Pipeline connection to Primorsk for diesel exports 460 km March 13 - Two CDUs damaged. Units brought online within around two months
27-Apr Ilsky (Kubanskaya Neftegazovaya Kompaniya) 132,000 Suspected damage to AT-1 unit Fully operational Black Sea export hub 340 km Feb 9 - CDU, oil products tank damaged. Unit back online within a month
23-Mar Kuibyshev (Rosneft) 140,000 Both CDUs offline after fire One CDU resumed, second undergoing repairs, plant operating around 50% capacity Domestic diesel source, heavy fuel exporter 920 km
16-Mar Syzran (Rosneft) 178,300 Fire at processing unit, CDU offline Main CDU, AVT-6 offline, operating around 30% capacity Diesel exporter to Eastern Europe, domestic supply to central Russia. 700 km
12-Mar Norsi (Lukoil) 340,000 Fire extinguished at site, CDU halted FCC unit repairs expected to last until summer, CDU AVT-6 expected back June Domestic -- key gasoline supply source 800 km

Source: S&P Global Commodity Insights, local reports