Fuel shortages spread in Russia as Ukraine ramps up attacks
Cars line up at a Lukoil gas station in Moscow, Russia, June 25, 2026. (EPA Photo)


The recent surge in Ukrainian attacks into Russian territory has caused fuel shortages to spread ​from Russian-annexed Crimea to nearby parts of southern Russia, and even to the capital Moscow, which has ⁠previously been spared, residents say.

Motorists in ⁠nearly all of Russia are limited in the amount of fuel they can now buy, with particularly severe restrictions imposed ​in all of Russian-occupied Ukraine, much ​of southern Russia ⁠and Siberia.

Only Moscow and a handful of mainly remote regions have no formal restrictions, although even in the capital, some filling stations are shut and others have long queues.

Russian President Vladimir Putin acknowledged on Sunday at a meeting with government ministers and other officials that Ukrainian drone strikes had triggered fuel shortages in some regions, but said that Russia was dealing with them.

In Crimea, which Russia captured from Ukraine and annexed in 2014, Ukraine has been attacking supply lines in ⁠recent ⁠weeks in what it says is a campaign to hit Russia's military effort.

Authorities there have suspended fuel sales to private motorists, shortened working hours and reduced the time that public transport and cafes operate.

When authorities offered limited sales of gasoline to the public in Crimea's largest city, Sevastopol, on Monday, motorists queued to buy it at prices of 189 rubles per liter, almost triple the normal ⁠price.

The shortages have spread to Rostov-on-Don, a southern Russian city close to the border with southeasetern Ukraine.

Some pump hoses there were wrapped in paper with "no fuel" written ​on them. One petrol station had a sign saying "Fuel sales have been ​temporarily suspended."

Vladimir, who gave only his first name, had brought his motorbike to fill up with no success.

"I worked as ⁠a ‌courier. I ‌stopped working. Thanks, everybody!" he said.

In Moscow, where ⁠a refinery was blown up during a ‌Ukrainian drone attack a week ago, prices have been held mainly unchanged at major ​filling stations operated by large, ⁠state-run oil companies, according to Moscow's Fuel Association.

But ⁠there have been queues for fuel in parts of the city, and ⁠at some ​privately owned filling stations, prices have jumped by more than 10% to around 80 rubles per liter.