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Fertiliser plant in Russia’s Vologda region damaged in Ukrainian drone attack, governor says

By Thomson Reuters Apr 26, 2026 | 3:02 AM

MOSCOW, April 26 (Reuters) – A fertiliser plant in Russia’s Vologda region was damaged in a Ukrainian drone attack on ​Sunday, local governor Georgy Filimonov ‌said.

Filimonov said a high‑pressure sulphuric acid pipeline was damaged in the city of Cherepovets at an Apatit complex, a subsidiary of PhosAgro, one of ‌the ​world’s largest producers of ⁠phosphate-based fertilisers.

The leak has ⁠been contained and there were no releases of hazardous chemicals, he said, adding that five people were injured.

According to PhosAgro, ​Apatit is Europe’s biggest producer of phosphate-based fertilisers, as well as phosphoric ⁠and sulphuric acids.

MAJOR ATTACK

Russia’s ⁠defence ministry said that from 2000 ​Moscow time (1700 GMT) on Saturday to 0900 ​on Sunday, Russian air defences shot down ‌more than 250 Ukrainian drones over more than a dozen regions.

Sevastopol governor Mikhail Razvozhayev said the city was targeted in ⁠one of the heaviest attacks to date, with 71 drones destroyed.

One person was killed and four ⁠were injured, ‌while residential buildings, shops and ⁠cars were damaged. Parts of ​downed ‌drones fell on railway tracks.

In the ​Yaroslavl region, ⁠where Ukraine has frequently targeted oil refineries, Russian air defences repelled another large‑scale drone attack, governor Mikhail Yevrayev said, without providing details.

(Reporting by Maxim RodionovEditing by Ros Russell, ​Elaine Hardcastle)