Key Russian Oil Terminal Hit Again By Drones; Zelenskyy Threatens More Strikes On Russia Facilities

Ust Luga, shown here burning on March 27, is one of Russia's main terminals for oil exports heading to Western markets.

A major Russian oil export terminal was hit by drones for a third time in a week, officials said, the latest in a series of Ukrainian attacks that have severely restricted Russia’s ability to take advantage of soaring global energy prices.

The Ust-Luga facility, on the southern shores of the Gulf of Finland near St. Petersburg, was damaged and set ablaze in the overnight attack on March 29, regional Governor Aleksandr Drozdenko said.

He did not identify the source of the drone, and Ukraine did not claim responsibility, but Russia’s Defense Ministry said Ukraine had launched more than 345 drones overnight at Russian targets nationwide. Drozdenko said 31 drones were downed over the Leningrad region.

It’s at least the third time that Ust-Luga has been hit in the past week; satellite imagery taken March 27 showed large plumes of smoke and flames billowing from the facility, which also handles coal, fertilizer, and iron ore exports.

Primorsk, another major export terminal on the northern shores of the gulf, was also hit a week ago.

SEE ALSO: Ukrainian Strikes Cause 'Most Serious Threat' To Russian Oil Exports Since Start Of Invasion

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who is on a trip to the Middle East as part of an effort to market Kyiv’s capabilities in anti-drone warfare, said on March 28 that about 60 percent of Ust-Luga’s export capacity had been knocked out.

He also said that unnamed “partners” had questioned Ukraine about the strikes, which have added to the squeeze of global oil supplies. He said Ukraine would stop targeting Russian facilities if Moscow stops targeting Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, which it has been doing throughout the winter.

With access to the Baltic Sea, Primorsk and Ust-Luga are two of the largest terminals for the export of Russian oil to Western markets. Last week, Reuters reported that the Ukrainian campaign may have taken more than 40 percent of Russia’s overall export capacity off-line.

A major oil export pipeline, Druzhba, that crosses through Ukrainian territory, has also been off-line for months now, after an unexplained explosion

"This is the most serious threat to exports of Russian oil and oil products since the war began," energy analyst Boris Aronshtein said.

"The thoughtfulness, the scale and direction of the attacks, as well as the timing of their execution -- all of this together produced an effect that I personally cannot recall in the four-plus years of the war," he told Current Time on March 26.

Russia, meanwhile, kept its near nightly barrage of Ukrainian targets, firing more than 400 drones and missiles at sites across the country, Ukrainian officials said.

At least several people were wounded in the Kharkiv region as a result of the attack, local police officials, including three people whose car was hit by a drone.

In the Black Sea region of Odesa, drones struck an energy facility, causing power outages in several towns, according to emergency officials.

With reporting by Current Time