# [WARNING] Ukraine Claims New 700km Deep Strikes Hit Russian Oil Reserve and Explosives Chemical Plant

*Sunday, June 14, 2026 at 9:10 AM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-06-14T09:10:44.642Z (32h ago)
**Tags**: Ukraine, Russia, Energy, Oil, Fertilizer, LongRangeStrike, DefenseIndustry
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/10399.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Ukrainian security services say they have hit a key Russian state oil reserve base in Yaroslavl region and an ‘Azot’ chemical facility in Tula that produces components for explosives, both far beyond previous front lines. The strikes raise direct pressure on Russia’s strategic fuel stockpiles and defense-industrial capacity, increasing medium‑term risk to oil, refined products and fertilizer supply chains.

## Detail

Ukrainian officials today claimed a new wave of deep strikes against Russian strategic infrastructure, targeting both fuel reserves and the defense‑industrial chain more than 700 kilometers from Ukrainian territory. If independently confirmed, this marks a significant expansion in range, scale and target selection in Kyiv’s campaign to degrade Russia’s ability to sustain a long war, with knock‑on risks for regional fuel markets and global fertilizer supply.

According to a statement posted around 09:02 UTC by Ukraine’s Security Service (SBU) and echoed in President Volodymyr Zelensky’s remarks, special operations forces hit the Russian state oil reserve facility ‘Temp’ in the city of Rybinsk, Yaroslavl region, at a distance of over 700 km from the Ukrainian border. Kyiv describes ‘Temp’ as part of Russia’s state material reserve system, implying strategic fuel stockpiles rather than purely commercial storage. In the same communication, Ukrainian authorities also report strikes in Russia’s Tula region against the ‘Azot’ plant, which they state produces components needed for explosives manufacture, as well as unspecified hits on Russian military logistics.

At this stage, reporting is single‑sided and comes from Ukrainian official channels; Russian federal authorities have not yet issued a detailed public damage assessment. However, video and photo evidence of fires at oil and chemical sites in the affected regions typically surfaces within hours in prior incidents, providing a near‑term verification path. The claimed range and the nature of the targets are consistent with Ukraine’s accelerating use of long‑range drones and improvised strike systems against Russia’s energy and industrial nodes.

For civilians and industry, these strikes matter less for immediate supply disruption and more for cumulative risk. Strategic reserves and large chemical complexes are deeply integrated into Russia’s domestic fuel availability, military logistics, and, in the case of explosives precursors, munitions output. Repeated hits on such assets can tighten regional fuel markets inside Russia, force rerouting of supply to priority sectors like the military, and, over time, constrain exportable volumes of refined products and nitrogen‑based fertilizers.

Militarily, the attacks extend the effective contested zone deep into Russia’s interior, compelling Moscow to disperse air defenses, harden key depots, and accept higher insurance and security costs across its logistics network. Hitting an explosives‑linked ‘Azot’ plant directly targets the ammunition production chain, potentially slowing Russia’s ability to sustain high rates of artillery and missile fire if such strikes become frequent and effective. The strike on a state reserve facility signals Kyiv’s intent to reach beyond frontline depots to the backbone of Russia’s strategic endurance.

For markets, this development reinforces an existing risk premium on Russian‑linked energy and fertilizer flows. While a single attack on a reserve base will not immediately cut export volumes, traders will price greater probability of periodic outages, internal rationing, or ad‑hoc export curbs if domestic supply tightens, particularly for diesel and gasoline. Fertilizer and ammonia markets could see renewed volatility if investors interpret the Tula ‘Azot’ strike as the start of a sustained campaign against Russia’s nitrogen‑chemicals sector. The ruble faces incremental downside pressure if domestic fuel shortages or internal price spikes force unpopular controls or subsidies.

Over the next 24–48 hours, watch for: independent visual confirmation of damage at the Rybinsk ‘Temp’ facility and the Tula ‘Azot’ plant; any Russian moves to restrict fuel exports or re‑prioritize deliveries to the military; additional Ukrainian claims of deep strikes against the Russian reserve system; and any insurance or freight‑rate adjustments for Russian oil and fertilizer cargoes. A pattern of repeated successful hits on Russia’s strategic reserves or explosives supply chain would materially increase medium‑term risk to regional energy stability and global agricultural input costs.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
Adds upside risk premium to oil, refined products, and fertilizer feedstocks; reinforces concerns over Russia’s ability to sustain fuel and ammonium-based exports under intensifying long-range attacks, with possible medium-term support for Brent, gasoil, and global fertilizer equities; marginally ruble-negative as domestic fuel constraints and logistics stress build.
