
Ukraine’s Drones Reach 1,700 Miles Into Siberia, Squeezing Russia’s Fuel Supply
Ukraine’s armed forces General Staff said Monday that its drones struck the Gazprom Neft–operated Omsk refinery in western Siberia, the largest fuel-processing plant in Russia and a target that had until this week sat far beyond Kyiv’s reach. The facility lies roughly 2,500 kilometers — about 1,550 miles — from Ukrainian-held territory, near the border with Kazakhstan. Vitaly Khotsenko, governor of the Omsk region, confirmed the attack, saying several drones broke through layers of air defense before igniting a fire at the plant.
The strike carried a message as much as a payload. Iryna Terekh, chief executive of the Kyiv-based defense firm Fire Point, said the company’s upgraded FP-1 drones flew the mission and called it a record for strike drones anywhere in the world. Fire Point’s chief designer, Denys Shtilierman, said the newest jet-launched version of the FP-1 can travel more than 2,100 miles, comfortably clearing the distance to Omsk. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, in his nightly address, described the operation as an important achievement and said Siberia now sits within range of Ukrainian precision strikes.
Two days later, the campaign widened again. On the night into Wednesday, Ukrainian long-range drones hit the Rosneft-operated Saratov refinery, the TANECO and TAIF-NK complexes in Tatarstan, and a Transneft-Ural pumping station near Ufa in Bashkortostan, according to Ukrainian military statements and regional officials. Saratov’s governor confirmed one person was killed and several injured. The pattern is deliberate: Kyiv is now going after refining, petrochemicals and the pipeline logistics that move crude, not just the refineries themselves.
For Vladimir Putin, the harder problem is arithmetic. Russia spans 11 time zones, and its air defenses were built to guard cities and military sites, not thousands of miles of energy infrastructure scattered across the map. Every deep strike forces Moscow to spread limited interceptors and radar over a far larger area, and the Omsk hit proved that even Siberia — long treated as a safe rear — is no longer off the target list.
The economic damage is already visible at the pump. Gasoline production has fallen roughly 17% to about 850,000 barrels a day, according to Russian government statistics, and analysts estimate that between a fifth and a quarter of the country’s refining capacity is now offline. The International Energy Agency this week called the level of disruption unprecedented in the history of the war. The Omsk plant’s main crude-distillation unit, which accounts for a large share of its output, was reported knocked offline, and the plant processes more than 20 million tons of oil a year.
That shortfall is rippling through daily life. By late June, more than 50 of Russia’s 83 regions were reporting fuel rationing or supply disruptions, with drivers in Moscow waiting hours to fill up and some stations limiting purchases to 20 to 30 liters per car. Crimea has seen sales to ordinary motorists halted outright. The government has banned gasoline and jet-fuel exports, is weighing a diesel export ban, and has loosened fuel-quality rules to keep lower-grade product flowing. To plug the gap, Moscow has started importing gasoline from Kazakhstan and Belarus and is exploring larger purchases from India.
The strain is showing up in the broader economy. The Bank of Russia has flagged rising gasoline prices as an inflation risk, with the rate running near 6% against a 4% target, and the government has cut its 2026 growth forecast to just 0.4%. Repairs are slow and costly because many refineries need specialized imported equipment that sanctions have made hard to source; the Moscow-area Kapotnya plant is expected to stay offline into next year.
The global market has stayed surprisingly calm about the Russian damage, largely because a separate shock is dominating traders’ attention. Brent crude traded near $78 a barrel on Wednesday, up sharply on the week, though the move was driven mainly by renewed U.S.-Iran hostilities and fresh worries over the Strait of Hormuz rather than events in Siberia. Russia’s Urals grade continues to sell at a discount to Brent, and with export terminals and shadow-fleet tankers now under attack, the risk is that Russian barrels reaching market keep shrinking.
There is a cross-border wrinkle for energy buyers, too. Gazprom said Wednesday that drones struck the Krasnodarskaya pumping station, which feeds the Blue Stream pipeline carrying gas to Turkey, though it said exports were not interrupted. Blue Stream and TurkStream are the last pipeline routes moving Russian gas into Turkey and onward toward Central Europe, and repeated hits on that infrastructure keep a tail risk hanging over those supplies.
For now, the race is between Ukraine’s attackers and Russia’s repair crews. Kyiv has struck all 11 of Russia’s largest gasoline producers, and with longer-range drones and domestically built missiles entering the mix, Moscow’s ability to patch and reroute is being tested as never before. Whether that pressure bends the Kremlin toward talks, or simply deepens the pain at Russian gas stations, is the question now hanging over every barrel.
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