Facing fuel shortages amid Ukrainian drone strikes, Russia may bring back a low-grade gasoline it banned in 2013
ONP Summary
Ukrainian forces have systematically attacked Russian oil refineries through drone strikes, causing widespread fuel supply problems across Russia. Putin acknowledged for the first time on Sunday that the country faces significant fuel shortages, though he characterized the situation as not yet reaching a critical state. Russian leadership plans to respond by enhancing air defense systems protecting energy infrastructure, importing additional fuel supplies, and prioritizing repairs at damaged facilities.
Progressive: Progressive-leaning outlets highlight Ukraine's military effectiveness and frame Putin's public acknowledgment as a significant forced admission of the strategic damage inflicted by Ukraine's deep-strike drone campaign on Russian energy infrastructure.
Conservative: Conservative-leaning outlets emphasize the visible economic and social disruption—fuel shortages spreading to gas stations even in Moscow—and frame the conflict within broader geopolitical context, highlighting Russia's vulnerability to attacks on critical infrastructure.
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Russia may allow the production and sale of gasoline and diesel fuel with environmental standards lowered as far as “Euro 2” for one year through July 2027, the Russian business daily Kommersant reported, citing a draft decree it had reviewed. ...