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Sources say that Russia's largest refinery has halted processing following a drone attack

Two industry sources said on Tuesday that the largest oil refinery in Russia, Omsk, had halted operations following an attack by a Ukrainian drone.

The attack on the refinery in Siberia was the longest-ranged Ukrainian attack of the war, which is now well into its fifth anniversary.

Fuel shortages are likely to be worsened by the shutdown of the plant. It is the top petrol producer in Russia.

The attack on Monday damaged the facilities at the Omsk refinery. Anatoly Seryshev said that no plant personnel were injured in a Tuesday statement.

Seryshev stated that a damage assessment was underway and that competent services had organized restoration work. He did not elaborate on how the refinery's operation was affected.

Gazprom, the owner of the refinery did not respond immediately to a comment request.

Sources claim that a crude distillation system, CDU-10 (which accounts for 38% of production capacity at the plant with a daily capacity of 24,580 metric tonnes), was damaged and set ablaze in the attack.

According to the data of the Saint Petersburg International Mercantile Exchange, the Omsk Refinery has stopped selling petrol and diesel since Tuesday.

Sources said that another primary unit, CDU-11 was also shut down. The unit accounts for 37%?of the plant's capacity, and can process up to 24,000 tons of?oil per day.

Sources said that while the unit itself was not damaged, certain network links vital to its operation had been damaged. The sources said that CDU-11, which began operations in 2023, may resume its work in the near future.

The Omsk refinery is home to two primary refining unit CDU-7 and CDU-8. Each has a capacity of 10,000 tons. The plant could theoretically restart them.

Sources indicate that the Omsk oil refining plant will process 22 million tons or 440,000 barrels of oil per day in 2024. This would produce 5 million tonnes of petrol and 8 millions tons of diesel. Reporting and Editing by Tomasz Janovowski

(source: Reuters)