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  • Russia imposes fuel rationing on civilians: Ukraine’s Foreign Intelligence
    Ukrainian intelligence reports fuel shortages now reach Russia’s Pacific territories, forcing Moscow to seek emergency supplies from Belarus. The reported restrictions from Crimea to the Pacific islands demonstrate how Ukraine’s systematic refinery strikes are creating supply disruptions far from front lines, potentially affecting both military logistics and civilian mobility. Russia has imposed strict 10-liter fuel rationing on civilians in the remote Kuril Islands while urgently purchasing pet
     

Russia imposes fuel rationing on civilians: Ukraine’s Foreign Intelligence

22 août 2025 à 17:43

Gas station fuel pumps with blue signs displaying 'НЕТ' (NO) in Cyrillic text, indicating the pumps are out of service due to fuel unavailability.

Ukrainian intelligence reports fuel shortages now reach Russia’s Pacific territories, forcing Moscow to seek emergency supplies from Belarus.

The reported restrictions from Crimea to the Pacific islands demonstrate how Ukraine’s systematic refinery strikes are creating supply disruptions far from front lines, potentially affecting both military logistics and civilian mobility.

Russia has imposed strict 10-liter fuel rationing on civilians in the remote Kuril Islands while urgently purchasing petroleum from Belarus to address spreading domestic shortages, Ukraine’s Foreign Intelligence Service reported on 21 August.

Since January, oil refineries have been the target of 42% of Ukrainian long-range strikes, making them the single most-hit category. Russian media, including The Moscow Times, have separately confirmed gasoline prices reaching record highs after refinery attacks.

Intelligence claims Belarus supplying emergency fuel

According to the Ukrainian intelligence report, Russian companies’ interest in Belarusian petroleum products “rose sharply” in the second half of August, citing the Belarusian state company Belneftekhim. The assessment claims Belarusian refineries are rapidly increasing supplies to meet Russian demand.

“Russian companies are urgently buying fuel from Belarus,” the Foreign Intelligence Service stated, though the scale and verification of these purchases could not be independently confirmed.

According to the intelligence assessment, the fuel crisis has spread from occupied Crimea, eastward through Russia’s Far Eastern regions of Transbaikalia and Primorye, ultimately reaching the remote Kuril Islands near Japan. 

Oil refinery strikes create price surge

Russian media have documented specific price increases from the strikes. The Moscow Times reported that wholesale gasoline prices reached historic highs after Ukrainian strikes on major refineries, with AI-92 gasoline jumping 38% and AI-95 nearly 49% since the start of 2025.

Confirmed impacts from open sources:

  • Three major refineries knocked offline in August (Ukrainian strikes target 13.5% of refining capacity)
  • Russian fuel prices surge 40-50% since start of year reaching historic records
  • Russia imposed gasoline export bans with extensions under consideration
  • Wholesale fuel prices trigger crisis forcing domestic market interventions

Recent verified strikes include multiple hits on the Ryazan refinery, which produces aviation fuel for Russian military aircraft, and the Volgograd facility, which processes over 14 million tons annually.

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Russia says 13 drones destroyed — but Syzran refinery burns and videos show fire raging at military-linked fuel plant

15 août 2025 à 03:49

russia says 13 drones destroyed — syzran refinery burns videos show fire raging military-linked fuel plant fires burn oil after drone strike 15 2025 telegram/exilenova+ syzran-oil-refinery-burning-nicely overnight struck rosneft-owned samara

Overnight on 15 August, drones struck the Rosneft-owned oil refinery in Syzran, Samara Oblast, sparking large fires at the facility. Located about 800 km from the front line, the plant is a major fuel supplier for both civilian needs and Russian military forces. The attack prompted emergency measures, including airspace closures and restrictions on mobile internet access across the region.

 In recent weeks, Russia has faced almost daily drone strikes aimed at military, defense-industrial, and fuel sites to hinder its war effort amid the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian war. The strike came just one day after another drone attack targeted the Lukoil oil refinery in Volgograd, sparking a major fire there. 

Explosions before dawn ignite major blaze

Media reports and social media posts, including videos shared by the Ukrainian Telegram channel Exilenova+, showed multiple fires and heavy smoke rising from the refinery after the strike. Residents said the first explosions occurred around 04:00, with at least ten blasts heard in total. The footage captured several points of fire and dense black smoke billowing over the complex.

Authorities impose emergency plan “Kovyor”

Samara Oblast governor Vyacheslav Fedorishchev claimed that Russian forces destroyed 13 drones and did not confirm any damage to the facility. He announced that the “Kovyor” emergency plan had been activated, grounding aircraft and closing airspace, and that mobile internet restrictions were in place “for public safety.” Residents, however, reported ongoing fires at the refinery.

Strategic fuel hub hit again

The Syzran refinery processes about 8.9 million tons of crude oil annually, producing gasoline, diesel, jet fuel, and bitumen. It supplies fuel to Samara, Saratov, and Penza oblasts, parts of central Russia, as well as airfields and military units of the Central and Southern Military Districts. Damaging the facility disrupts fuel deliveries to Russian occupation forces.

The plant has been attacked before. Ukrainian drones also struck it in February and March this year, causing fires then as well.

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