Ukrainian UAV swarm attack causes Russia to "lose 5% of oil refining capacity"

Báo Dân tríBáo Dân trí30/01/2025

(Dan Tri) - Observers estimate that Ukraine's UAV attack on Russian energy facilities has caused Moscow to lose 5% of its oil refining capacity.


Đòn tấn công bầy đàn của UAV Ukraine khiến Nga mất 5% công suất lọc dầu - 1

Kstovo oil refinery on fire (Photo: WarTranslated).

Earlier this week, Ukrainian drones attacked the Nizhny Novgorod oil refinery in Kstovo, central Russia, some 837km from the front line in northern Ukraine. The explosions sparked a massive fire that the Ukrainian General Staff described as “fierce” and continued throughout the early morning.

A campaign of deep strikes on Russian oil facilities by Ukraine has been going on for about two years, but this month's raids mark a significant escalation.

The Kstovo plant has a refining capacity of 13 million barrels of oil a year, accounting for about 5% of Russia's total refining capacity. Attacks on several other refineries this month may have cut Russia's output of petroleum products by more than a tenth.

The refineries can be repaired but Ukraine can always send in more attack drones.

After three years of continuous development, the Ukrainian defense industry has developed more than 10 different models of long-range attack drones, which can carry dozens of kilograms of explosives up to 1,280km away and strike with high precision. Some other models can travel more than 1,600km.

Compared to the millions of dollars it would cost to rebuild an oil refinery, a drone—or even a swarm of drones—is much cheaper. The Aeroprakt A-22 sport plane that Ukraine converted into an attack UAV costs about $130,000.

The attacks on Russia's vital oil industry are part of a broader strategy by Ukraine to deprive Moscow of its main source of revenue.

The United States is also joining in. New U.S. sanctions on Russian tankers, imposed by the Biden administration in its final two weeks in office, have begun to rattle Russian customers in China and India.

The question is whether President Donald Trump will maintain sanctions, lift them, or strengthen them. In his first days in the White House, Trump has not had a clear strategy for America’s new role in the Russia-Ukraine war. Trump had previously pledged to end the war on his first day in office (January 20), a promise he has clearly failed to keep.

Meanwhile, Keith Kellogg, a retired US Army lieutenant general and Mr Trump’s special envoy for Ukraine and Russia, has long called for tougher sanctions on the energy industry, which he sees as a “weapon” of Russia. But there is no guarantee that Mr Kellogg’s views will become official policy.

Regardless of US support, Ukraine is determined to continue its attacks on Russian oil facilities. “Combat operations against strategic facilities supporting the Russian operation will continue,” the Ukrainian General Staff said.



Source: https://dantri.com.vn/the-gioi/don-tan-cong-bay-dan-cua-uav-ukraine-khien-nga-mat-5-cong-suat-loc-dau-20250130192808395.htm

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