S&P Global Offerings
Featured Topics
Featured Products
Events
S&P Global Offerings
Featured Topics
Featured Products
Events
S&P Global Offerings
Featured Topics
Featured Products
Events
S&P Global Offerings
Featured Topics
Featured Products
Events
Solutions
Capabilities
Delivery Platforms
News & Research
Our Methodology
Methodology & Participation
Reference Tools
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.
Featured Events
S&P Global
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.
S&P Global Offerings
S&P Global
Research & Insights
S&P Global
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.
About Commodity Insights
Solutions
Capabilities
Delivery Platforms
News & Research
Our Methodology
Methodology & Participation
Reference Tools
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.
Featured Events
S&P Global
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.
S&P Global Offerings
S&P Global
Research & Insights
S&P Global
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.
About Commodity Insights
18 Mar 2024 | 17:10 UTC
Highlights
More long-range drone attacks hit major Russian refineries, fuel depots
Outages total 600,000 b/d, over 120,000 b/d gasoline, 130,000 b/d diesel affected
Gasoline export ban comes ahead of domestic demand surge in spring
Refining facilities and fuel storage infrastructure in western Russia have become the target of a major escalation in long-range drone attacks by Ukraine. In less than a week, three major refineries and a number of fuel depots deep inside Russian territory have been damaged by drones, taking more than 600,000 b/d of processing capacity offline. The attacks, with drones now able to strike assets more than 1,000 km within Russia, have sharply raised the risk profile for Moscow's ability to maintain its oil exports in the near term.
"What remains to be seen is whether downstream capacity outages in Russia will result in crude shut-ins -- playing to their incremental voluntary cut [under the OPEC+ agreement] of 471,000 b/d by June -- or shuffled into more crude exports at the expense of diesel and fuel oil flows," S&P Global Commodity Insights oil analysts said.
Global refinery outages have been elevated this year, surpassing pre-pandemic averages from 2015-19. Downtime is expected to rise through April, with an average of up to 9 million b/d offline, partly raised by the surge in unplanned outages due to drone strikes in Russia.
The Russian government has asserted that given ample inventories there is "no risk" of fuel supply problems, although domestic spot prices for oil products have climbed amid panic buying after the strikes. The spike in Ukrainian drone attacks on Russian refineries is also weighing on the supply outlook for Russian crude, according to Morgan Stanley.
Recent drone attacks on Russian refineries and oil infrastructure | ||||||
Date | Name | Capacity (b/d) | Impact | Status | Domestic/export focus | Approximate distance from Ukrainian border |
17-Mar | Slavyansk (Slavyansk Eco) | 60,000 | Fire caused by downed drone, suspected CDU and VDU outages | Partly operational | Export | 350km |
16-Mar | Syzran (Rosneft) | 178,300 | Fire at processing unit, CDU offline | Partly operational | Diesel exporter to Eastern Europe, domestic supply to central Russia. | 700km |
16-Mar | Novokuybishev (Rosneft) | 166,000 | No impact, strike averted | Fully operational | Domestic diesel source, heavy fuel exporter | 900km |
13-Mar | Novoshakhtinsky (Yug Rusi) | 112,00 | Downed drones fell on plant | Operations suspended | Domestic feedstocks hub | 15km |
13-Mar | Kirishi (Surgutneftegas) | 420,000 | None | Fully operational | Domestic supply source to Leningrad Region, exports excess diesel/ fuel oil via Primosrk, UstLuga | 300km |
13-Mar | Ryazan (Rosneft) | 342,000 | Two CDUs damaged | Partly operational - Two CDUs responsible for around 70% capacity offline | Domestic - fuel supply source to Moscow Pipeline connection to Primorsk for diesel exports | 460km |
12-Mar | Oryol storage depot (Rosneft) | - | One storage tank impacted | Partly operational | Domestic | 220km |
12-Mar | Norsi (Lukoil) | 340,000 | Fire extinguished at site, CDU halted | Partly operational | Domestic – key gasoline supply source | 800km |
10-Mar | Kursk oil depot | - | Fire at site | Fully operational | Domestic | 100km |
6-Mar | Voronezh oil tank farm | - | None – two drones downed | Fully operational | Domestic | 180km |
5-Mar | Gubkin oil depot, Belgorod (Rosneft) | - | Fire in storage tanks | "No threat of fire spreading" | Domestic | 90 km |
4-Mar | St. Petersburg oil terminal | 235,000 | None – strike from drone with 20 kg explosives prevented | Fully operational | Major Baltic export terminal for fuel oil, other exports from Russia and Belarus | 850 km |
15-Feb | Polevaya oil terminal, Kursk region | - | Fire in 100 mt fuel tank | No casualties | Domestic | 100 km |
9-Feb | Ilsky (Kubanskaya Neftegazovaya Kompaniya) | 132,000 | Suspected damage to 72,000 b/d CDU, oil products tank | Operational after maintenance, according to officials | Black Sea export hub | 340 km |
3-Feb | Volgograd (Lukoil) | 314,000 | Internal pipeline fire on CDU VDU 5 Unit | Unit offline, expected back shortly | Domestic fuel source to Southern Russia | 350 km |
Pipeline connection to Novorossiisk for diesel exports | ||||||
31-Jan | Nevsky Mazut fuel oil storage terminal | - | Fire in fuel oil railcars, drone downed | "No substantive damage" | Domestic fuel oil storage | 870 km |
29-Jan | Yaroslavl (Slavneft-Yanos) | 301,200 | None – drone strike prevented | Fully operational | Domestic fuel source to central Russia | 700 km |
Pipeline connection to Primorsk for diesel exports | ||||||
25-Jan | Tuapse (Rosneft) | 240,000 | Fire in VDU, suspected damage | Planned Feb maintenance brought forward, with repairs due to end in May. Continued loadings seen in February, likely from storage. | Black Sea export hub for refinery feedstocks | 400 km |
21-Jan | Ust Luga gas condensate processing plant (Novatek) | 7 million mt/year of gas condensate | Processing affected; loadings suspended in the aftermath | Tankers resumed loadings Jan. 24, shipping mostly gas condensate. Oil products loadings resumed mid-February, according to officials. | Baltic Sea naphtha export hub | 870 km |
19-Jan | Bryansk oil product depot (Rosneft) | - | Fire across four tanks (6,000 cu m total), drone downed | Fully operational | - | 100 km |
18-Jan | St. Petersburg oil terminal | 235,000 | None – drone strike prevented | Fully operational | Major Baltic export terminal for fuel oil, other exports from Russia and Belarus | 850 km |
Source: S&P Global Commodity Insights, local reports |