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Ukraine’s kamikaze drone strike set the oil refinery ablaze, cutting off 70 percent of the fuel supply to Moscow.

A Ukrainian drone attack started a fire at the refinery that is the largest fuel supplier to the Moscow region on Tuesday, and two industry sources told Reuters that it had halted operations.

Moscow Mayor Sergey Sobyanin announced the incident on Russia’s state-run Maks platform, saying that “one of the drones damaged a Moscow oil refinery facility” and that there were no injuries. He added that 60 drones targeting Moscow had been intercepted on Tuesday alone — what the TASS state news agency described as one of the largest barrages aimed at the Russian capital this year.

Local authorities closed the area around the refinery to traffic following the strike.

Zelensky confirmed Ukraine was responsible, framing the operation as a show of long-range force. “This time, the Moscow region felt the reach of Ukraine’s long-range capabilities. An oil refinery was hit at a distance of 500 kilometres,” he wrote on social media, sharing footage appearing to show a drone passing over residential buildings before striking an industrial site near a red-and-white chimney.

The ​sources said the strike on Gazprom Neft’s refinery in southeast Moscow damaged a primary refining facility that accounts for 53% of ‌the plant’s capacity.

Witness footage verified by Reuters showed a fierce blaze and dense black smoke rising from the refinery after the attack.

Local emergency services later said the fire had been put out and had not affected operations – information that was contradicted by the sources, ​who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said a facility at the site had been damaged, without giving further details.

In ​a separate development highlighting the pain that Ukrainian drone strikes are inflicting, Russian oil producer Tatneft announced nationwide caps ⁠on purchases at its fuel stations following an attack on its refinery in Tatarstan last week.

Ukraine has Intensified Attacks on Refineries

Seeking to hit a major ​source of Russia’s war funds, Ukraine’s attacks on refineries have doubled since the start of 2026, leading to full or partial shutdowns of oil processing and a ​decline in gasoline, diesel and jet fuel output, according to official data, social media, and Reuters calculations.

The strategy is increasingly straining Russia’s domestic fuel market.

A growing number of regions have reported localised supply issues. The energy ministry sought on Monday to reassure farmers that enough fuel would be available for the critical summer season when they need it for ​harvesting.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said the Moscow refinery was hit from a distance of 500 km (310 miles), illustrating the reach of Ukraine’s long-range strikes.

“This ​is a just response to Russian strikes – and to the dragging out of a war that must be ended,” he said on X. He was attending the G7 summit ‌in France, ⁠where he has sought to show U.S. President Donald Trump and European allies that Ukraine’s battlefield fortunes have improved as Kyiv pushes for more support.

The Moscow plant, which has been targeted multiple times, processed 11.6 million metric tons of oil in 2024, producing 2.9 million tons of petrol and 3.2 million tons of diesel, according to the latest available data.

Gazprom Neft did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Long lines of motorists queueing in Russian-controlled Crimea, ​southern Krasnodar region, and elsewhere underscore ​the sensitive domestic fallout from Ukraine’s ⁠strikes.

Crimea is among the regions where restrictions on fuel sales have been imposed this month to try to preserve stocks.

On Tuesday, Tatneft – Russia’s fifth-biggest oil company and third-largest refiner – said it was introducing restrictions on fuel purchases at its ​hundreds of stations across Russia, the first retailer to implement nationwide caps.

A Tatneft station in Serpukhov district, south of ​Moscow, was limiting ⁠sales to 20 litres (5.28 U.S. gallons) of gasoline per car or 40 litres of diesel and accepting only cash, according to a Reuters witness.

Two industry sources told Reuters this week that Tatneft’s TANECO oil refinery in Tatarstan had suspended crude processing following a drone attack on June 12.

Supplies have also been tight this month in ⁠the Russian-controlled region ​of Donetsk in eastern Ukraine. Some gas stations in Donetsk city had no fuel on ​Tuesday, while drivers were queuing for up to three hours to refuel at others.

“Everyone’s saying the drones are hitting the refineries and nothing is getting to us,” said one driver, Darya, who ​was so low on fuel she feared having to walk home.

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