Russia's Volgograd oil refinery has restarted primary unit hit by drone, sources say
MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia's Lukoil last week restarted a key production unit at its Volgograd refinery, the largest in southern Russia, which was shut earlier this month after being damaged in a drone attack, two industry sources told Reuters on Monday.
The plant, with production capacity of some 300,000 barrels per day (bpd), caught fire on May 12 following a drone strike, local officials said. Sources said the CDU-1 unit had been damaged in the attack.
Lukoil did not immediately reply to a request for comment.
Ukraine does not officially confirm or deny attacks on oil refineries inside Russia, but it says the facilities are legitimate targets helping the Russian war effort at a time when Russian strikes are pounding Ukrainian energy infrastructure.
The Volgograd refinery was also attacked by drones in February and was able to conduct maintenance within 18 days.
The CDU-1 unit has a capacity of 18,590 metric tons per day, and annual production of 6.5 million metric tons, or 130,000 bpd, of oil.
It makes up 43% of the refinery's capacity and accounted for 49% of actual refinery processing in the first quarter of 2024.
(Reporting by Reuters; Writing by Vladimir Soldatkin; Editing by Jan Harvey)