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Sources say that the damaged Ust-Luga terminal could force Russian refineries reduce their production.

Two market sources say that the closure of Russia's Baltic Port of Ust-Luga after a drone strike?on Wednesday may force major refineries in Europe to reduce crude oil runs because of shipping restrictions.

Sources and social media reports claim that the strike caused damage to a rail deloading rack at the Ust-Luga Terminal.

The Ust-Luga bottleneck threatens oil processing in four of the largest refineries in 'the European part of Russia - Kirishi Yaroslavl Moscow and Ryazan. According to traders, they process around 55 million metric tonnes of crude oil each year (400,000 barrels a day).

On Wednesday, the?Ust-Luga Oil Terminal stopped releasing rail cargoes including supplies from these big refineries.

RUN CUTTING EXPECTED IN DAYS

"Ust-Luga ceased?taking fuel oil and gasoline on Wednesday. We will need to reduce runs to the minimum within days and then possibly shut down units," said a refinery expert.

All sources spoke under condition of anonymity, as they were not authorized to speak publicly about the matter.

Traders estimate that Ust-Luga is one of Russia's main export hubs of refined products and handles 18 million tonnes of fuel oil per year.

Sources said that disruptions in fuel oil export shipments are a major challenge for refiners.

Fuel oil is not as popular in the home market, but it can still be purchased. The domestic market accounts for between 18% and 35% of all crude oil runs at the affected refineries.

Reduced runs to curb fuel oil production would also reduce gasoline production during a season of increased demand.

Refiners consider emergency measures

Fuel oil is the bottleneck. "We are looking at ways to reduce dark yields, divert to bitumen and bunker fuel, as well as other ports. We will also cut runs, load secondary units maximally (fuel oil utilisation)," a refinery said.

When operations will resume at Ust-Luga is unclear.

On Wednesday, Kirishi Refinery was also hit by a drone and could reduce processing. This would ease the shortage of transshipment capacity, as fuel oil production will decrease. Barbara Lewis edited the report by Barbara Lewis.

(source: Reuters)