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Russia's Volgograd oil refinery has rebooted main system struck by drone, sources say

Russia's Lukoil last week restarted an essential production unit at its Volgograd refinery, the biggest in southern Russia, which was shut earlier this month after being harmed in a drone attack, 2 market sources informed on Monday.

The plant, with production capability of some 300,000 barrels per day (bpd), ignited on May 12 following a drone strike, local authorities stated. Sources stated the CDU-1 unit had been damaged in the attack.

Lukoil did not right away reply to a request for comment.

Ukraine does not formally confirm or reject attacks on oil refineries inside Russia, but it states the centers are legitimate targets helping the Russian war effort at a time when Russian strikes are pounding Ukrainian energy facilities.

The Volgograd refinery was also assaulted by drones in February and was able to carry out maintenance within 18 days.

The CDU-1 system has a capacity of 18,590 metric loads daily, and annual production of 6.5 million metric heaps, or 130,000 bpd, of oil.

It makes up 43% of the refinery's capacity and represented 49% of real refinery processing in the first quarter of 2024.