
Fuel crisis widens as Ukrainian strikes knock out 40% of Russia’s refineries
Ukrainian drone strikes have knocked out about 40% of Russia’s refining capacity, triggering broad fuel rationing across St. Petersburg, Belgorod, Kursk, and the occupied parts of Luhansk, with caps such as 50 litres per receipt in St. Petersburg, 95 litres at some Rosneft stations, 20 litres per customer in occupied Luhansk, and 60 litres in Moscow’s region; Crimea reports long queues and a shadow market as prices rise. Russia also tightens exports and leans on Belarus imports while budgets tighten amid the crisis.





