# [WARNING] Fresh fire at Russia’s Perm refinery after prior drone strikes

*Tuesday, May 12, 2026 at 2:58 PM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-05-12T14:58:37.218Z (2h ago)
**Tags**: MARKET, ENERGY, Russia, Ukraine, Refining, GeopoliticalRisk
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/6549.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Reports indicate a new large-scale fire at the Perm refinery and associated oil infrastructure in Russia following earlier Ukrainian drone strikes. This suggests repeated disruption risk to Russian refining and product export capacity, adding to the geopolitical risk premium in oil and refined products markets.

## Detail

What happened:
A large-scale fire is reported to be raging again in Perm, Russia, after explosions, shortly after Ukrainian drone attacks that had already severely damaged the local refinery and an oil pumping station. This follows earlier confirmed drone strikes on the same assets, implying either incomplete repairs or renewed successful targeting of the facility.

Supply-side impact:
Perm is a significant regional refining hub; while exact capacity for this specific complex isn’t cited in the report, Russian mid-sized refineries typically run in the 100–200 kb/d range. Even partial or intermittent outages can remove tens of thousands of barrels per day of refined products (diesel, gasoline, fuel oil) from domestic and export supply. Russia has already seen multiple refinery disruptions from Ukrainian drones; cumulatively these have constrained internal product balances and intermittently affected export flows, especially to Turkey, MENA and parts of Africa.

This new fire materially raises the probability that:
- The Perm complex remains at reduced rates for longer than initially expected, or suffers additional downtime.
- Russian authorities may need to re-route crude and adjust export product slates, tightening regional diesel and fuel oil availability.

Market impact and direction:
- Crude benchmarks (Brent, WTI): Bullish. While refinery outages can sometimes be neutral-to-bearish for crude, in this context repeated successful strikes on Russian energy infrastructure increase the geopolitical risk premium and perceived vulnerability of broader upstream/midstream assets. Expect upward pressure on Brent and Urals differentials, potentially >1% intraday.
- Refined products: Bullish for European diesel/gasoil crack spreads and fuel oil, given Russia’s role as a key supplier. The market is already sensitive to any additional constraints amid the concurrent US–Israeli war on Iran and shipping disruptions.
- Freight and Russian product spreads: Higher volatility in Russian product exports, wider discounts vs. benchmarks, and potential rerouting via longer routes could lift clean tanker rates.

Historical precedent:
Earlier in 2024–2025, coordinated drone attacks on Russian refineries (e.g., Ryazan, Norsi, Tuapse) repeatedly triggered 2–5% moves in European diesel and noticeable risk-premium increases in Brent. The market has become more accustomed to these events, so the incremental move may be smaller but still material.

Duration:
Impact is likely multi-week to multi-month if damage is extensive or attacks recur, with a more persistent effect on risk premium as Ukraine demonstrates extended reach into the Russian energy heartland.

**AFFECTED ASSETS:** Brent Crude, WTI Crude, Urals crude differentials, ICE Gasoil futures, European diesel crack spreads, Fuel oil swaps, Clean tanker freight (MR, LR1) in Baltic/Black Sea–Med
