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Russia’s largest oil refinery halts processing after drone attack, sources say

By Thomson Reuters Jul 7, 2026 | 9:57 AM

July 7 (Reuters) – Omsk oil refinery, Russia’s largest, has halted operations following a Ukrainian drone attack, two industry sources said on Tuesday.

Monday’s strike on the refinery, deep in Siberia, ​was one of Ukraine’s longest-range attacks of the conflict, ‌now well into its fifth year.

The halt in operations at the plant, which is Russia’s top producer of petrol, is likely to exacerbate fuel shortages across the country.

“Facilities at the Omsk oil refinery were damaged as a result of (Monday’s) ‌attack. ​No plant personnel were injured,” Anatoly Seryshev, ⁠President Vladimir Putin’s representative ⁠in Siberia, said in a statement on Tuesday.

“Damage assessment is currently under way, and competent services have organized restoration work,” Seryshev said, without spelling out how the refinery’s operations were affected.

Gazprom Neft, ​which owns the refinery, did not immediately reply to a request for comment.

According to the sources, a crude distillation unit, CDU-10, ⁠which accounts for around 38% of ⁠the plant’s production capability with a capacity of 24,580 ​metric tons a day, caught fire and was damaged in the ​attack.

Omsk refinery has stopped selling gasoline and diesel on the ‌Saint Petersburg International Mercantile Exchange since Tuesday, according to data from the exchange.

The sources said another primary processing unit, CDU-11, was also halted. It accounts for 37% of the plant’s capacity and is ⁠able to process 24,000 tons of oil per day.

While the unit was not hit, some network links essential to its operation were damaged, the ⁠sources said. They ‌said CDU-11, which entered operation in 2023, could ⁠resume work in the near future.

Omsk refinery has two ​mothballed ‌primary refining units, CDU-7 and CDU-8, with a ​production capacity ⁠of 10,000 tons each. In theory, the plant could restart them.

According to the source-based information, Omsk oil refinery processed 22 million tons of oil, or around 440,000 barrels per day, in 2024, producing 5 million tons of petrol and 8 million tons of diesel.

(Reporting by ReutersEditing ​by Tomasz Janowski)