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The Omsk oil refinery, Russia's largest, reported a fire on Monday but said it was operating as usual and that production plans will be fulfilled. Later it said the fire will not affect its ...
Ukraine claimed Saturday to have struck one of Russia’s largest oil refineries in a drone attack, starting a fire at the facility more than 700 miles into Russian territory. The attack on the ...
It is one of the largest refineries in Russia, participating on the Urals and West Siberian oil market, where it is the only refinery in operation in the Ural Federal District. [5] As of 2022, it is Russia's largest privately owned oil processing plant, with a total processing capacity of nine million ton of crude oil per year.
This is a list of oil refineries. The Oil & Gas Journal publishes a worldwide list of refineries annually in a country-by-country tabulation that includes for each refinery: location, crude oil daily processing capacity, and the size of each process unit in the refinery. For some countries, the refinery list is further categorized state-by-state.
Reporting a “powerful fire” at the oil refinery in Kstovo, a city in Russia’s Nizhny Novgorod region, Ukraine’s military said on Wednesday morning that it was still clarifying the extent ...
Russia has the largest reserves and was the largest exporter of natural gas. [1] It has the sixth largest oil reserves, and is one of the largest producers of oil. [2] It is the fourth largest energy user. [3] In 2009, Russia produced 12% of the world's oil and had a similar share of global oil exports. [4] Russia produced an average of 10.83 ...
MOSCOW (Reuters) -A Ukrainian drone struck Russia's third largest oil refinery on Tuesday about 1,300 km (800 miles) from the front lines, hitting a unit that processes about 155,000 barrels of ...
By the mid-1970s, the refinery processed an estimated 24 million tons of oil products, the highest in the entire country. [citation needed] A unit commissioned in 1994 enabled the refinery to process heavy oil and to increase oil conversion rates to 85%. [3] In 1995, the refinery became a part of Sibneft, which was renamed to "Gazprom" in 2006.