Putin shrugs off fuel shortages in Russia as he ramps up attacks on
Ukraine
[July 03, 2026]
Despite severe fuel shortages across Russia, President Vladimir Putin
appears unbothered by Ukraine’s increasing attacks on his country’s oil
refineries.
He has shrugged off the setback for one of the world’s leading
oil-producing nations as “not critical,” dismissed ceasefire proposals
and insisted the war will continue until his goals are met.
Putin has described the attacks on Russian energy as an effort by
Ukraine to distract attention from its losses on the battlefield,
although analysts say the advance of Russian forces has been stymied in
recent months. The Russian leader appears to believe his government can
keep the fuel crisis from eroding his authority and support for the war
he launched more than four years ago.
The Russian military unleashed a massive 11-hour barrage on the
Ukrainian capital overnight into Thursday morning that killed at least
30 people. It was one of the deadliest attacks on Kyiv since the start
of Russia's full-scale invasion.
Here's a deeper look at the latest exchange of strikes and Putin’s
refusal to halt the fighting:
Gas shortages worsen in Russia as more oil facilities are hit
There have been more than 50 reported Ukrainian attacks on oil
refineries and other energy facilities in Russia and occupied Crimea
since March — a barrage Ukrainian leaders have said is intended to
pressure Moscow to end the war.
At the very least, the attacks have brought the war home even more
poignantly for millions of Russians, shattering Putin’s narrative of the
conflict as something that doesn’t affect the lives of ordinary people
in his country.

An estimated one-third of Russia’s refining capacity has been cut off,
according to Chris Weafer, CEO of the consultancy Macro-Advisory. The
attacks have inflicted lasting damage that will be costly to fix.
Despite significant air defenses protecting Russia's capital, a top
refinery in Moscow has been hit twice. The second strike on June 18 set
it ablaze, damaging key equipment that will reportedly take until the
end of the year to repair.
With gasoline production in Russia reduced by roughly 17% to 850,000
barrels a day, according to government statistics, rationing has been
introduced in many regions, and motorists have had to wait in line for
hours to refuel.
Crimea, which Russia illegally annexed from Ukraine in 2014, has faced
the worst fuel shortages. Gasoline sales to individuals have been
periodically halted there altogether.
Putin downplays the impact of Ukrainian strikes
Putin chaired a meeting of government officials last weekend to discuss
the fuel shortages.
In televised statements, he acknowledged the country was going through a
“difficult period.” He pledged to accelerate repairs of energy
facilities and said Russia would consider importing gasoline to help
make up for what he described as “temporary” shortages. He also said
Russia's arms industry will boost production of air defense systems to
fend off future Ukrainian attacks.
Putin portrayed the Ukrainian strikes as an attempt to divide Russian
society, halt Moscow's offensive and try to force the Kremlin into
negotiations on “terms advantageous to our adversary.”
“We will not give them that chance,” he said.
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Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a meeting with Kaliningrad
Region Governor Alexey Besprozvannykh in Moscow, Thursday, July 2,
2026. (Gavriil Grigorov, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP)

While Putin said Ukraine's long-range strikes on Russian oil
facilities “have absolutely no effect on the situation at the
front,” Western military analysts say mid-range strikes on the
Russian army in recent months have hampered military logistics and
slowed the tempo of its advance, leaving the battlefield in a
stalemate.
Putin claims Russian forces are still advancing across the roughly
1,000 kilometer-long (620 mile-long) front line. In an interview
last weekend with state TV, Putin mentioned the names of small
villages and even streets in Ukraine.
Putin dismisses Ukraine's ceasefire offers
The Russian president has responded to Ukrainian President Volodymyr
Zelenskyy's offer to meet by challenging him to come to Moscow, a
non-starter to Ukraine.
Putin has rejected a truce that Kyiv and its Western allies have
proposed. He says it would only give Ukrainian forces time to rest
and regroup.
He has made any ceasefire conditional on Ukraine's withdrawal from
the part of the Donetsk region it still controls, a demand rejected
by Ukraine. Putin has said that a final peace deal must oblige
Ukraine to abandon its bid to join NATO, reduce its military and
protect Russian language and culture.
In last Sunday's interview, Putin claimed that Ukraine had offered
to limit the fighting to the four regions that Russia annexed but
never fully captured: Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia. He
said he rejected the proposal because it would free up Ukrainian
forces from other areas where Russian troops have made inroads and
let them focus on fending off the Russian attacks in the four
southeastern regions.
“Faced with a catastrophic shortage of personnel, the armed forces
of Ukraine apparently believe this could be their salvation,” Putin
said. “Saving the Kyiv regime is not part of our plans.”
The Kremlin said the offer was made via confidential channels;
Ukrainian officials have not publicly discussed any such proposal.
Putin also dismissed a Ukrainian proposal to mutually halt strikes
deep into each other's territory. Russian attacks deep into Ukraine
are “much more powerful, sensitive and, frankly speaking,
destructive,” he said.
In Thursday's deadly barrage on Kyiv, Russia once again hit
residential areas even as it claimed to be targeting military sites.
By contrast, the vast majority of Ukrainian strikes in Russia have
hit oil facilities, weapons factories and other military targets.
A United Nations tally says more than 16,000 Ukrainian civilians
have died in the war.
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