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Edition of 06:00 CETFriday, July 10, 2026
311 outlets · 17 languages306 briefings today
Energy & ClimateFriday, July 3, 2026

Russian Refining Output Plummets to 20-Year Low as Drone Strikes Trigger Nationwide Fuel Shortages

Gasoline production fell 17% year-on-year in June, forcing authorities to impose purchase limits in 60 of 89 regions and seek emergency imports from India and Belarus.

Russia’s domestic fuel supply chain buckled in early July after a sustained Ukrainian drone campaign against oil refineries pushed monthly processing volumes down 25% year-on-year to 3.91 million barrels per day, the lowest level in more than two decades. Gasoline output contracted 17% to 850,000 barrels per day, well below domestic demand, according to industry estimates. The shortfall has triggered the most extensive fuel distribution restrictions since the Soviet era: by the first week of July, 60 of Russia’s 89 regions had imposed per-customer limits, typically 20–40 litres of petrol and up to 80 litres of diesel, while several cities, including Novorossiysk and much of Crimea, temporarily suspended free sale to private motorists altogether.

The production collapse is the cumulative effect of repeated long-range drone attacks that have forced unplanned outages at multiple large refineries across European Russia and Siberia. Although Russia remains one of the world’s largest crude oil producers, its refining capacity has been severely degraded, creating a bottleneck that logistics alone cannot bypass. Queues at filling stations have stretched for hours, and a black market has emerged, with police in Krasnodar detaining individuals transporting fuel for resale. The central bank has said it cannot yet quantify the inflationary impact of the price rises that have accompanied the shortages.

The government in Moscow has responded with a mix of regulatory easing, import diplomacy and public reassurance. Vice-Premier Alexander Novak ordered oil companies to deliver additional supplies to the most affected regions, singling out Irkutsk Oblast and Zabaikalsky Krai, where local authorities have introduced priority refuelling for emergency services and deployed citizen patrols to maintain order at petrol stations. The cabinet also permitted the sale of lower-standard Euro-3 fuel until the end of the year and maintained a ban on petrol exports through 31 July 2026. To bridge the gap, Russia has begun importing gasoline from India and is in talks with Belarus and Kazakhstan; Kazakhstan’s energy ministry said it would consider a request if spare capacity exists. The knock-on effects are already visible in Central Asia, where Uzbekistan has recorded sharp price increases and Kyrgyzstan has appealed for external fuel assistance.

The immediate trigger for relief will be the ability of oil companies to redirect supplies as ordered by Novak, though industry analysts in London note that the underlying refining deficit cannot be resolved without repairing damaged plants—a process that takes months under sanctions-constrained access to Western equipment. The next milestone is the expiry of the export ban at the end of July, which may be extended if domestic stocks remain under pressure. For now, the Kremlin insists the situation is “not simple but controllable,” even as queues spread to oil-producing regions of Siberia and state media are instructed to avoid the word ‘crisis’.

Divergence — who tells it how
Axis: Gestione vs. Crisi sistemica
45%Medium
3 blocs · positions from −0.70 to +0.40
europea_continentale, altre_fontirussa
RUSEURLAT
Divergence between press blocs
Russian & CIS press+0.40aligned
Continental European press−0.70critical
Latin American press0.00neutral
Russian & CIS press+0.40
Voice

Russia manages the crisis with targeted measures, importing gasoline and containing discomfort. The system holds despite external pressures.

Mechanismnormalizzazione tecnica

A systemic problem is turned into a resolvable hiccup, minimizing its scale and shifting blame to external factors.

PragmatismVictimhood
Continental European press−0.70
Voice

Europe denounces the crisis as proof of Russian isolation and inefficiency, linking it directly to the war in Ukraine.

Mechanismescalation simmetrica

A causal link is established between Moscow's war choices and domestic hardship, turning a technical problem into a political condemnation.

AlarmOutrage
Latin American press0.00
Voice

Latin America observes the Russian crisis as a market datum, assessing possible effects on regional prices and supplies.

Mechanismneutralità commerciale

A technical-economic language is adopted that depoliticizes the crisis, reducing it to a supply-and-demand variable.

DetachmentPragmatism

Broaden your view

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Upd. 12:14 AM2 languages · 9 outlets
PreviousEnergy & ClimateNext
9 outlets|2 languages|3 min read
Friday, July 3, 2026

Russian Refining Output Plummets to 20-Year Low as Drone Strikes Trigger Nationwide Fuel Shortages

Gasoline production fell 17% year-on-year in June, forcing authorities to impose purchase limits in 60 of 89 regions and seek emergency imports from India and Belarus.

Russia’s domestic fuel supply chain buckled in early July after a sustained Ukrainian drone campaign against oil refineries pushed monthly processing volumes down 25% year-on-year to 3.91 million barrels per day, the lowest level in more than two decades. Gasoline output contracted 17% to 850,000 barrels per day, well below domestic demand, according to industry estimates. The shortfall has triggered the most extensive fuel distribution restrictions since the Soviet era: by the first week of July, 60 of Russia’s 89 regions had imposed per-customer limits, typically 20–40 litres of petrol and up to 80 litres of diesel, while several cities, including Novorossiysk and much of Crimea, temporarily suspended free sale to private motorists altogether.

The production collapse is the cumulative effect of repeated long-range drone attacks that have forced unplanned outages at multiple large refineries across European Russia and Siberia. Although Russia remains one of the world’s largest crude oil producers, its refining capacity has been severely degraded, creating a bottleneck that logistics alone cannot bypass. Queues at filling stations have stretched for hours, and a black market has emerged, with police in Krasnodar detaining individuals transporting fuel for resale. The central bank has said it cannot yet quantify the inflationary impact of the price rises that have accompanied the shortages.

The government in Moscow has responded with a mix of regulatory easing, import diplomacy and public reassurance. Vice-Premier Alexander Novak ordered oil companies to deliver additional supplies to the most affected regions, singling out Irkutsk Oblast and Zabaikalsky Krai, where local authorities have introduced priority refuelling for emergency services and deployed citizen patrols to maintain order at petrol stations. The cabinet also permitted the sale of lower-standard Euro-3 fuel until the end of the year and maintained a ban on petrol exports through 31 July 2026. To bridge the gap, Russia has begun importing gasoline from India and is in talks with Belarus and Kazakhstan; Kazakhstan’s energy ministry said it would consider a request if spare capacity exists. The knock-on effects are already visible in Central Asia, where Uzbekistan has recorded sharp price increases and Kyrgyzstan has appealed for external fuel assistance.

The immediate trigger for relief will be the ability of oil companies to redirect supplies as ordered by Novak, though industry analysts in London note that the underlying refining deficit cannot be resolved without repairing damaged plants—a process that takes months under sanctions-constrained access to Western equipment. The next milestone is the expiry of the export ban at the end of July, which may be extended if domestic stocks remain under pressure. For now, the Kremlin insists the situation is “not simple but controllable,” even as queues spread to oil-producing regions of Siberia and state media are instructed to avoid the word ‘crisis’.

Divergence — who tells it how
Axis: Gestione vs. Crisi sistemica
45%Medium
3 blocs · positions from −0.70 to +0.40
europea_continentale, altre_fontirussa
RUSEURLAT
Divergence between press blocs
Russian & CIS press+0.40aligned
Continental European press−0.70critical
Latin American press0.00neutral
Russian & CIS press+0.40
Voice

Russia manages the crisis with targeted measures, importing gasoline and containing discomfort. The system holds despite external pressures.

Mechanismnormalizzazione tecnica

A systemic problem is turned into a resolvable hiccup, minimizing its scale and shifting blame to external factors.

PragmatismVictimhood
Continental European press−0.70
Voice

Europe denounces the crisis as proof of Russian isolation and inefficiency, linking it directly to the war in Ukraine.

Mechanismescalation simmetrica

A causal link is established between Moscow's war choices and domestic hardship, turning a technical problem into a political condemnation.

AlarmOutrage
Latin American press0.00
Voice

Latin America observes the Russian crisis as a market datum, assessing possible effects on regional prices and supplies.

Mechanismneutralità commerciale

A technical-economic language is adopted that depoliticizes the crisis, reducing it to a supply-and-demand variable.

DetachmentPragmatism

This story appeared in

9 outlets · 2 languages

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