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    20 commenti

    1. New_Poet_338 on

      There is only one major refinery within 1000 km that has an effective smoking ban. My guess is that is the next one.

    2. LaughableIKR on

      This is a wonderful graphic. Thank you very much! I hope Ukraine hammers the Russian refineries every week.

    3. DaHairyKlingons on

      This is a great picture.
      I hope that the barrel graphic is right (60%supply impacted).
      I don’t know what that means for Russian domestic needs (I.e do they need 5m or 100m per year for own use?).
      Will be interesting to see if/when agreements get renegotiated due to supply issues.

    4. Drunk_on_Swagger on

      I love that Orsk is now under water. May the tide continue to rise!

    5. Pepsi_Popcorn_n_Dots on

      Pipelines as well! They can be fixed quicker, but will still need to be shut down fir a couple days, but they are much larger and harder to protect. Twice a week strikes up and down the line could lead to essentially permanent shutdowns of pipelines.

    6. YoungestDonkey on

      Good going. Make it harder and harder to fuel up their war machines.

    7. >*If the affected refineries were to stop completely

      That’s a pretty big asterisk, OP.

      We know for a fact that’s not the case. And a lot of the damages do get eventually repaired.

      I’m the first to cheer when one more goes up in flames, but that chart is a straight up lie.

      Let’s leave cope and delusions to the Russians, and focus on reality shall we?

      The Russian oil industry is definitely ailing. It could fail to the point that it causes their economy to finally collapse (the gasoline shortages are certainly an encouraging sign).

      It doesn’t even need to hit zero for that to happen, just too little to sustain their own needs.

      But Ukraine still needs to score a lot more hits to make that happen.

    8. Karina_only on

      🔥 Kirishi, Saratov, and Bashkortostan already hit. Strikes on refineries and ports (Primorsk, Ust-Luga) have knocked out up to 20% of capacity. At this pace, even “deep” refineries aren’t safe — next targets likely big export-oriented ones

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