Ukraine says it has struck a critical oil-pumping station in Russia’s Bryansk region, igniting a large fire at a hub feeding the Druzhba pipeline to Europe. The Unecha facility also links to the Baltic Pipeline System-2, which carries Russian crude to Ust-Luga, the country’s second-largest Baltic oil port.
Kyiv’s General Staff reported explosions in both storage and pump areas. Bryansk governor Alexander Bogomaz blamed Ukrainian rockets and drones, calling the strike a “terrorist act,” but said the fire was contained. Hungary’s MOL and Slovakia’s Transpetrol reported no disruption to crude deliveries, and Kazakhstan’s energy ministry said its oil transit via the network was unaffected.
The attack is the latest in a string of Ukrainian strikes on Russian energy infrastructure this month, which have already disabled three major refineries. Those outages, combined with rising domestic demand, helped to drive Russia’s seaborne fuel exports down 6.6% in July. Analysts expect refined product exports to drop further in August, while crude shipments from western ports may rise as Moscow runs short on storage.
The Unecha hit comes just days before an expected Trump-Putin meeting, with CBS reporting the White House is working toward a trilateral summit with Ukraine at the end of next week. Trump has been ratcheting up economic pressure on Russia’s buyers, doubling tariffs on Indian goods over New Delhi’s continued imports of Russian crude, and warning China of possible 500% duties.
Russian officials, meanwhile, are signaling hard lines ahead of any talks. Lawmakers told state media that Moscow would only negotiate under terms recognizing “new realities,” a reference to its control of occupied Ukrainian territory, and vowed Russia would “win decisively” regardless of Western pressure.
With energy infrastructure now squarely in Ukraine’s crosshairs and both sides hardening their positions, the Unecha strike underscores the stakes — and the risks — facing next week’s high-wire diplomacy.
By Julianne Geiger for Oilprice.com
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