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Firemens take hours to put out Russian refinery blaze after Ukraine drone strike

A Ukrainian drone attack caused a fire at a Russian oil refinery that burned for hours on Saturday before it was brought under control in the latest of numerous damaging strikes this week on Russia's crude oil processing plants.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy did not attend to the reported attack however thanked his armed forces, security service and primary intelligence directorate for the brand-new Ukrainian long-range capabilities.

In his nightly video address, he said it had become clear in current weeks that Ukraine could use its weapons to exploit what he called vulnerabilities in the Russian war machine, adding, What our own drones can do is really a long-range Ukrainian ability.

Interfax news firm priced estimate the emergency situations ministry as saying that open burning at the Syzran refinery had actually been halted, but procedures were still under method to extinguish it entirely.

It was unclear how the fire would impact production at the plant, which has the capacity to process 8.5 million metric heaps of petroleum a year, or 170,000 barrels per day.

An attack on another refinery, Novokuibyshevsky, on Saturday was prevented, the regional governor stated. Both plants are owned by Rosneft and found in the Samara area southeast of Moscow, some 800 km (500 miles) from the closest Ukrainian-controlled area.

A Ukrainian source informed that Kyiv's SBU intelligence agency had actually struck 3 Samara area Rosneft refineries: Syzran, Novokuibyshevsky, and Kuibyshevsky. Russian media have not reported a strike on the Kuibyshevsky refinery, which is found in the city of Samara.

The SBU continues to implement its method to undermine the economic capacity of the Russian Federation, which permits it to wage war in Ukraine, the source stated.

Ukraine has repeatedly shown its ability to strike deep inside Russia, focusing particularly on energy infrastructure. In the past few days, such attacks have triggered fires at Lukoil's NORSI refinery in Nizhny Novgorod, east of Moscow, and Rosneft's plant in Ryazan, southeast of the capital.

NORSI's primary crude distillation unit was harmed, which meant a minimum of half of the refinery's production was stopped, market sources told . The Ryazan plant stopped units that represent about 70% of its output, sources said.

Interruption to refinery operations has the potential to strike production and require up costs. Even before the most recent attacks, Russia had bought a six-month ban on fuel exports from March 1 to help keep prices steady, amid rising demand from vehicle drivers and farmers, and to allow for upkeep.

In other incidents this week, a drone was damaged on the borders of the Kirishi refinery near St Petersburg on Tuesday while on Wednesday the Novoshakhtinsk refinery in the southern area of Rostov suspended operations briefly after downed drones fell on it.

Russia is voting through Sunday in a three-day presidential election that is essentially specific to give Vladimir Putin 6 more years in the Kremlin.

(source: Reuters)