On Thursday, Gazprom’s Astrakhan gas plant in Russia suspended motor fuel production following a fire triggered by a drone attack, industry sources said.
According to Reuters, operations at a key gas condensate processing unit – capable of producing up to 3 million tons annually – have been halted.
The unit supplies gasoline and diesel fuel, and repairs could take weeks or even months, they said.
Regional governor Igor Babushkin said the fire was caused by debris from a downed drone, which struck the facility on Wednesday.
The extent of the damage remains unclear, but one source said equipment used to process hydrogen sulfide and extract sulfur was affected, potentially complicating the restart of operations.
The Astrakhan plant is one of Gazprom’s key condensate processing facilities.
In 2024, it processed 1.8 million tons of condensate, producing around 800,000 tons of gasoline, 600,000 tons of diesel, and 300,000 tons of fuel oil.
The incident marks another disruption to Russia’s energy sector, which has been increasingly targeted by drone strikes linked to the war in Ukraine.
The plant had only recently resumed operations in April after being offline since September last year, according to sources.
Ukrainian officials have previously reported targeting key industrial sites, including oil refineries and processing plants, as part of broader efforts to disrupt fuel supply chains.
Previously, President Volodymyr Zelensky said that Ukraine’s long-range strikes have inflicted at least $7 billion in losses on Russia’s oil sector, with the strikes not only hitting designated targets, but also increasing facility downtime.
Prior to this, on Wednesday, a Ukrainian drone strike halted operations at Lukoil’s refinery in Russia’s Perm region, triggering fires and damaging key equipment.
The strike is part of Kyiv’s ongoing campaign to disrupt Russia’s oil infrastructure and weaken its war funding.