# [WARNING] Ukraine Deepens Strikes on Russian Oil, Gas and Taman Port

*Wednesday, May 13, 2026 at 7:19 AM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-05-13T07:19:36.669Z (2h ago)
**Tags**: Ukraine, Russia, Energy, Oil, BlackSea, Drones, War, Markets
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/6620.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Between approximately 06:45 and 07:02 UTC on 13 May, Ukraine reportedly struck several Russian energy infrastructure sites: the Astrakhan gas processing plant, the Nurlino oil pumping station in Bashkortostan, and oil tanks at the Tamanneftegaz depot in Taman port, Krasnodar Krai. These attacks extend an ongoing Ukrainian campaign against Russia’s internal oil logistics and a key Black Sea export node, with growing implications for Russian energy output and global market risk premia.

## Detail

1) What happened and confirmed details

Between 06:45 and 07:02 UTC on 13 May 2026, multiple OSINT and regional reports describe a new wave of Ukrainian long‑range drone strikes against Russian energy infrastructure:

- At 06:45 UTC (Report 4, corroborated by Report 7), the governor of Astrakhan region stated that high‑precision debris from downed UAVs attacked the Astrakhan gas processing plant, causing a fire. NASA FIRMS satellite fire data is cited as confirming an active fire at the facility.
- At 06:56 and 07:02 UTC (Reports 6 and 8), Ukrainian sources report an attack on the Nurlino oil pumping station in Bashkortostan, a node that transports crude to multiple refineries inside Russia. A fuel tank at Nurlino is reportedly on fire.
- At 07:01–07:02 UTC (Reports 9 and 10), multiple sources report overnight Ukrainian drone strikes on the Taman Port area in Krasnodar Krai. Up to three oil tanks at the Tamanneftegaz oil depot are reportedly burning, with Russian S‑300 systems observed firing four missiles and most drones described as shot down.

These incidents fit into an already active Ukrainian campaign targeting Russian oil and gas infrastructure deep inside the country and at export hubs; prior alerts have covered earlier waves, but this is a fresh, multi‑node strike event extending both geography and persistence.

2) Who is involved and chain of command

The attacks are attributed to Ukraine, likely via long‑range one‑way attack drones controlled by Ukrainian military intelligence (GUR) and/or the Air Force under the Ukrainian General Staff. On the Russian side, regional authorities (Astrakhan governor, Bashkortostan officials, Krasnodar/Taman military district command) and national air defense forces (SAM units including S‑300) are engaged in response and damage control.

3) Immediate military/security implications

- Strategic depth: Strikes on Astrakhan and Bashkortostan confirm Ukrainian ability to hit targets deep in Russia, stressing Russian air defense coverage over critical energy assets.
- Logistics pressure: Nurlino’s role as a pumping station to multiple refineries means any sustained disruption can constrain internal crude flows, reducing refinery utilization or forcing rerouting.
- Export risk: Taman is a significant Black Sea energy and bulk export hub; damage to oil storage tanks can reduce short‑term loading capacity and raise local shipping and insurance risk.
- Escalation potential: Russia is already responding with a large drone wave (Report 11 notes 150–200 Geran‑2/Gerbera drones launched at Ukraine, 120+ in the air, likely as a prelude to missile strikes). Further retaliatory strikes on Ukrainian energy and grid infrastructure are likely in the next 24–48 hours.

4) Market and economic impact

- Oil and refined products: Direct physical volume loss from these specific fires may be limited in the very near term, but cumulative damage to pumping stations and storage tanks increases operational risk and potential future throughput constraints. Traders will price in higher disruption probability for Russian crude and products flows, especially via Black Sea routes.
- Shipping and insurance: The attack on Taman port reinforces the Black Sea as a contested theater. War‑risk premiums and insurance costs for vessels loading in Russian Black Sea ports could edge higher, affecting netbacks and potentially rerouting some flows.
- Currencies and equities: Russian energy equities and the ruble face headline and sanction‑risk pressure as Western policymakers may use Ukraine’s campaign as leverage for new sanctions or enforcement on Russian exports. Energy‑importing economies could see slightly higher oil price expectations; energy majors and defense stocks may gain.
- Gas markets: Astrakhan is a gas processing node; any extended outage could marginally affect regional gas liquids and condensate flows, though global gas markets are less sensitive than oil at present.

5) Likely next 24–48 hour developments

- Damage assessment: Expect clearer satellite and local reporting on the scale of damage to Nurlino, Astrakhan GPP, and Taman tanks within 12–24 hours. Key watchpoint is whether pumping/processing capacities are materially reduced for more than a few days.
- Russian retaliation: The ongoing large‑scale Geran/"Gerbera" drone launch toward western Ukraine (Report 11) suggests imminent follow‑on missile salvos, likely against Ukrainian energy and air defense assets tonight and into tomorrow morning.
- Ukrainian campaign continuity: Given demonstrated reach and effects, Ukraine is likely to sustain or escalate this deep‑strike campaign against Russian energy nodes, potentially adding more refineries, pumping stations, and export terminals.
- Policy/sanctions angle: Depending on corroborated damage and market reaction, G7 and EU discussions on tightening enforcement of Russian oil price caps or further restricting logistics (insurance, shipping) could re‑intensify.

Overall, this coordinated wave of strikes marks a meaningful continuation and geographic widening of Ukraine’s strategy to degrade Russia’s energy backbone, with non‑trivial implications for regional energy logistics and global risk pricing.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
Cumulative Ukrainian strikes on Russian internal oil and gas logistics and the Taman port depot increase perceived geopolitical risk premia for oil and refined products. Expect support for Brent/Urals spreads, possible Russian export/logistics disruptions, and upward pressure on energy equities and tanker/shipping insurance costs. Broader risk sentiment could be affected if Russia escalates in response.
