NewsUkrainian drone strikes ignite fuel facility fire in Kursk

Ukrainian drone strikes ignite fuel facility fire in Kursk

Huge fire in Russia. Three fuel tanks went up in flames.
Huge fire in Russia. Three fuel tanks went up in flames.
Images source: © Telegram | @gubernator_46
Sara Bounaoui

28 July 2024 11:13

On Sunday morning, a fire broke out at a fuel storage facility in the Kursk region, in the European part of Russia. The Russians claim this is the result of attacks by Ukrainian drones.

Three tanks at the fuel storage facility in the Kursk region in the European part of Russia caught fire as a result of the Ukrainian drone attack—the governor of the region, Alexei Smirnov, reported on Sunday morning, citing Reuters.

No one was killed or injured. The fire in one of the tanks was quickly extinguished, but the fight against the fire in the remaining part of the facility continued. Thirty-two fire units and 82 firefighters were brought to the scene—Smirnov said in a statement published on Telegram.

Ukrainians target military objectives in Russia

The previous day, on Saturday, the Ukrainian side admitted to conducting drone attacks on the Russian Olenya Air Base in the Murmansk region, located far beyond the Arctic Circle, as well as on an airbase in Engels, located in the Saratov region. Olenya Air Base is approximately 1,798 kilometres from the Ukrainian border.

Also on Saturday, based on information from Russian sources, Ukrainian media reported drone attacks on the Diagilevo Airport and an oil refinery in the Ryazan region, which lies just under 200 kilometres southeast of Moscow.

Ukrainian forces and special services regularly conduct complex operations in Russia using drones. The targets of these actions are military, industrial, and technological infrastructure, including those far from Ukraine's borders.

Reports from recent months note particularly increased activity of attacks on Russian oil refineries. According to Reuters' estimates, the production capacities of those facilities in Russia rendered out of operation in the first quarter of 2024 because of drone attacks reached approximately 5.1 million tonnes of oil (averaging 58,826,700 litres per day), about 7 per cent of the country's total oil processing capacity.

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