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Fuel crisis hits Russia and causes Russian frustration

Farmers in Russia's grain belt are worried that they won't be able to harvest crops due to a fuel shortage caused by Ukraine's drone strikes on oil refineries and storage depots.

Fuel supplies in oil-rich Russia have been squeezed by Kyiv's attempts to pressurize Moscow to make 'peace' with strikes on its energy infrastructure. This has led to fuel restrictions and public unrest across the country.

The shortage has also prompted drivers to share maps and tips on which stations offer fuel and have shorter lines. In social media footage, drivers have been seen fighting as they wait for fuel.

In a video titled "The Ultimate Luxury 2026," a man pours gasoline into his lawnmower slowly from a jerrycan and jokes, "What riches." Who can afford it now?"

Searches for "how to siphon" online jumped from 697 a few months earlier to 9,300 searches by the 21st of June, according to Yandex data cited by iPhones.ru. Since launching its so-called special military operation, in 2022 Russia has attacked Ukraine's energy infrastructure repeatedly. This has left many Ukrainians without heat or power during the winter.

The Russian authorities are uncomfortable with the evidence of the wider impact of Ukraine's war, as they initially downplayed fuel shortages.

A social media post describes farmers in fertile Black Earth?region as struggling to pay for fuel to?harvest. Another tells of a farmer who had to drive his combine to a regular gasoline station because he wasn't allowed to fill a?can.

Could not independently verify the account. On Sunday, President Vladimir Putin acknowledged that there were problems and promised to take measures to stabilize the market. He stressed the importance of maintaining fuel supplies for the agricultural sector, "because the harvest is dependent on it". Alexander Novak said that his energy point man, Deputy Premier Alexander Novak, stated on Wednesday that the problems were being addressed. Exclusively, it was reported that Russia has begun to import seaborne gasoline from India. Kazakhstan also agreed to provide 50,000 metric tonnes of gas to Russia between July and August. A poll conducted this week showed that Russians felt more pessimistic than ever before about the economy, even before the shortages escalated last month.

In some areas, basic services are being cut. In the Zabaikalsky Region, near China and Mongolia on the border, authorities have cancelled bus routes, and a waste collection firm has suspended service in four districts citing fuel shortages.

"More frightening is how much groceries are going to cost." "All deliveries are made by road," a?person commented on an article on the website regional news outlet Chita.ru about the cuts.

The comment was "liked" by more than 100 people. Fuel shortages may erode public support as strikes continue. The war began in February 2022, when Russia invaded Ukraine, and now is in its fifth year.

Tatiana Sedykh, who was waiting in line for diesel at a fuel station in Rostov on Don in southern Russia, said she was happy she had chosen it. The line at the gas station is insane. "I'm beginning to wonder if I should start walking to work." (Additional reporting in Rostov on Don, edited by Mark Trevelyan & Alexander Smith).

(source: Reuters)