Ukraine drone strike hits Tamanneftegaz sea terminal in southern Russia
A Ukrainian drone attack has sparked fires at the Tamanneftegaz sea terminal in southern Russia, according to Russian and Ukrainian statements. Russian authorities said one person was killed in the strike, which hit the facility in the Temryuk district of Krasnodar region. Local officials said drone debris caused a fire in part of the site, while reports from the area said damage was also seen at fuel tanks and loading stands.
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Krasnodar governor Veniamin Kondratyev said on Telegram that the fire broke out in part of the terminal after the attack. Ukrainian security service SBU said it had targeted the Tamanneftegaz terminal, describing it as the largest liquefied hydrocarbon transshipment complex in southern Russia. The SBU said the strikes hit five fuel tanks and two oil loading stands, and that fires were sparked in the area of the freight transport depot and storage facilities.
The terminal is in the village of Volna on the Black Sea coast and is used to transport crude oil, petroleum products and liquefied gas. Damage to such infrastructure can affect export flows and domestic fuel logistics, particularly when attacks are part of a wider campaign against energy assets. The latest strike comes amid a series of Ukrainian attacks on Russian refineries, depots and pipelines, which Kyiv says are linked to the war effort.
The incident also underlines the continuing vulnerability of energy infrastructure far from the front line. Russian President Vladimir Putin has acknowledged that Ukrainian strikes are causing damage, while saying Russia would recover quickly and intensify its own attacks on Ukrainian infrastructure. Ukraine has argued that Russian oil and gas revenues help fund the war, and the SBU said it would continue to target that sector systematically.
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The attack on Tamanneftegaz fits into a broader pattern of cross-border strikes that have increasingly focused on strategic economic targets. The facility's role as a transshipment point gives it significance beyond the immediate fire damage, because it sits within Russia's wider export and storage network. The reported death also adds to the human cost of a campaign that has largely centred on industrial and energy sites.
What remains unclear is the full extent of the damage at the terminal and whether operations have been disrupted for longer than the initial fire. It is also not clear whether Russian officials have confirmed the number of drones involved or the precise cause of the fatality. Further official updates would be needed to establish the scale of repairs and any knock-on effects for fuel handling at the site.
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