# [WARNING] Ukraine Deep Strikes Hit Russian Oil Depot Near Moscow

*Sunday, June 14, 2026 at 9:00 AM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-06-14T09:00:51.549Z (33h ago)
**Tags**: MARKET, energy, geopolitics, Russia, Ukraine, oil
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/10396.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Ukrainian drones struck the Temp oil storage depot in Rybinsk, Yaroslavl region, destroying multiple tanks and igniting large fires at a major Rosrezerv-linked facility supplying western Russia. The attack extends Ukraine’s energy war deeper into Russia’s core, raising expectations of further disruptions to Russian refined product exports and logistical strains around Moscow. This supports a higher risk premium in crude and refined products, especially in European benchmarks.

## Detail

Multiple reports confirm Ukrainian long‑range drone strikes on the FGKU “Temp” oil storage depot in Rybinsk (Yaroslavl region), roughly 300 km from Moscow. The site is described as a major oil storage depot with 61 tanks; local reporting notes several strong fires and “oil rain” over the city after explosions. Zelensky publicly confirmed SBU strikes on an oil facility in Yaroslavl region as part of a campaign targeting Russian energy and industrial assets.

Temp’s exact throughput and connectivity to export flows are not fully specified, but the description and Rosrezerv link imply a significant role in regional fuel storage and potentially strategic reserves. Alongside previous confirmed hits on the Hrusheva Balka/Novorossiysk transshipment complex, the pattern is a systematic Ukrainian campaign against Russian oil infrastructure reaching ever deeper into the country’s interior.

Direct global supply loss is likely small in volumetric terms near‑term – this is storage, not upstream production – but repeated hits on depots, ports and strategic stocks in western Russia introduce material operational friction, higher internal transport costs, and local shortages. Over time this can constrain Russian refined product exports (notably diesel, fuel oil, naphtha) or force re‑routing, which tightens Atlantic Basin balances.

Market impact should be felt most in Brent, gasoil, and crack spreads. A >1% move in Brent and European diesel is plausible as traders re‑price the rising probability that Russia’s export infrastructure becomes a recurring target, particularly as attacks approach the Moscow region. Russian Urals and ESPO differentials could widen on perceived logistics and sanctions risk. European utilities and refiners gain some margin support from higher cracks; Russian energy equities and ruble assets face incremental geopolitical risk.

Precedent: Earlier in 2024–25, Ukrainian strikes on Russian refineries produced repeated 1–3% up‑moves in Brent and pronounced spikes in European diesel cracks, even when physical losses were modest. The key driver was risk premium, not immediate barrels. The impact here is similar: structural as long as Ukraine maintains long‑range strike capacity, but price effects will be expressed as episodic spikes around each new high‑profile hit rather than a single lasting step‑change.

**AFFECTED ASSETS:** Brent Crude, WTI Crude, ICE Gasoil, European diesel cracks, Urals crude differentials, Russian energy equities, Ruble FX
