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Russian Oil Refining Capacity Plummets 14.5%

Reuters calculations showed on Friday that the share of Russia's refining capacity that is offline this month has jumped from August to 14.5% of all processing capacity amid Ukrainian drone attacks and planned and unplanned technical outages. 

According to estimates based on data from industry sources compiled by Reuters, the Russian oil refining capacity that's now offline jumped by 34% in September. 

As more of Russia's refining capacity is now offline, this could lead to higher crude oil exports as Russia doesn't have too much storage space to store crude in tanks. 

Market sources told Reuters earlier this week that the September loading plans for the oil export terminals on Russia's Baltic ports have been revised slightly higher. 

Apart from some seasonal maintenance, the Russian refining capacity has seen more idle units because of Ukrainian drone attacks on Russian oil and energy infrastructure. 

Energy installations have been key targets in the conflict by both sides. 

Ukrainian attacks on Russian refineries and other energy infrastructure have become a fixture this year, with drones the weapon of choice for conducting the strikes. 

Ukraine continues to target refineries in Russia and some of these attacks have affected further product supply from Russian refineries.

In recent months, Russia has seen higher-than-expected maintenance and repairs at its refineries after Ukraine stepped up its drone attacks early this year on the Russian refining capacity. In addition to unplanned repairs to fix damages from the drones, some refineries have been undergoing planned maintenance. This dragged down Russia's fuel output and exports earlier this year. 

In the middle of August, the Russian government said that Moscow is extending its ban on gasoline exports from October to the end of December 2024, as it seeks to keep domestic supply stable amid seasonal demand and scheduled repairs at refineries.   

By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com

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Tsvetana Paraskova

Tsvetana is a writer for Oilprice.com with over a decade of experience writing for news outlets such as iNVEZZ and SeeNews.  More