Friday, May 1, 2026

Oil rain and toxic fumes: Black Sea town faces environmental catastrophe as Ukrainian strikes rock Russia: Full Article

 begin quote:

Oil rain and toxic fumes: Black Sea town faces environmental catastrophe as Ukrainian strikes rock Russia

"You can smell it anywhere in the town," one resident said of the acrid stench that gets stronger the closer you get to Tuapse's center. 
 

Black Sea town faces environmental catastrophe as Ukrainian strikes rock Russia

“You can smell it anywhere in the town,” one resident, Svetlana, told NBC News of the acrid stench that gets stronger the closer you get to Tuapse’s center.
Get more newson

The Black Sea isn’t meant to be this black.

A popular seaside town in Russia has seen oil wash onto its beaches, dark drops of rain and oil soot land on homes, and plumes of thick acrid smoke billow above its red rooftops.

Residents of the usually picturesque Russian resort town of Tuapse were this week warned not to leave the homes or open windows as authorities tackled intense fires from a series of Ukrainian drone attacks on the town’s oil refinery.

The huge blaze was finally extinguished Thursday, the local governor said, though another drone attack hit the town’s sea terminal Friday, sparking a fire.

Tuapse now faces a daunting cleanup operation and a hit to its upcoming tourist season. Its residents will also be awaiting further attacks, as Ukraine intensifies its campaign to disrupt the Russian oil industry and deprive the Kremlin of crucial funding for its war machine.

“You can smell it anywhere in the town,” one resident, Svetlana, told NBC News of the acrid stench that gets stronger the closer you get to Tuapse’s center.

Svetlana, who did not want her last name shared out of fear of repercussions for talking about a sensitive security topic, said she could see smoke from her window even though she lives on the edge of town, far from the refinery.

Russia Oil Refinery Fire
A large plume of thick smoke from a Ukrainian drone attack on an ⁠oil refinery in the Black Sea port ⁠of Tuapse, Russia, on Tuesday.Boris Morozov / Sputnik via AP

She said she evacuated her young daughter so she doesn’t breathe in the pollution. The town’s schools have been shuttered since Tuesday, local authorities said.

“People used to say that this is all happening somewhere farther away and we are fine,” she said, but “I think many have begun to realize everything that is happening.”

With the U.S.-Iran standoff over the Strait of Hormuz sending energy prices soaring, Ukraine has increased its attacks on Russian energy infrastructure to try and stop the Kremlin from cashing in. In recent days, Kyiv said it hit an oil facility near the city of Perm, more than 900 miles from Ukraine — part of what President Volodymyr Zelenskyy touted as a “new stage in the use of Ukrainian weapons to limit the potential of Russia’s war.”

Russian President Vladimir Putin said earlier this week that Kyiv’s attacks “against civilian infrastructure are becoming more frequent,” adding that the strikes on Tuapse “could potentially cause serious environmental consequences.”

The disaster unfolding on the Black Sea coast comes at a difficult moment for the Kremlin, which is already facing a wave of popular discontent over a perceived disconnect from ordinary Russians and their mounting problems: an ailing economy, rising prices and growing restrictions on what they can do online.

In Tuapse, a sense that the economy and ecology of their town was now at risk meant “many people are in a depressed state,” said Svetlana. “There is nothing good to expect.”

The government response has been “insufficient,” Svetlana added, and she thinks that local volunteers have been shouldering the weight of the initial cleanup effort.

Fires at Tuapse Oil Refinery - April 16, 2026
Satellite images released on April 16 show fires at the Tuapse refinery.2026 Vantor / via Getty Images

The town is usually home to some 60,000 people, as well as the scores of tourists who visit in the summer to enjoy mild weather, sunshine and beaches. Instead, the black smoke from the fires can be seen in satellite images, and some locals have shared images of black droplets covering their car windshields and windows.

Russian state media largely ignored the situation in Tuapse until the third attack, on Tuesday. But volunteer groups have been sharing images of cleanup operations on the local beaches, where they have been trying to scoop up oil from the gravel and sand, and wash street animals and sea birds off black sticky tar.

Tuapse now finds itself the latest Russian hot spot in the four-year conflict that is increasingly weighing on Putin’s domestic popularity.

The Russian leader dispatched his emergencies minister, who said Tuesday the situation was “under control” and oil was no longer escaping from the refinery. Putin said later Tuesday that “there don’t seem to be any serious threats” to the town. He accused Ukraine of resorting to such “terror” strikes because it couldn’t stop the advance of Russian troops on the battlefield.

Regional Gov. Veniamin Kondratyev shared a video of himself walking around the town with smoke billowing in the background and oil that escaped from a damaged reservoir streaming down a street.

Heavy machinery and more than 600 cleanup crews were deployed to work on the town’s shoreline, Kondratyev said, as he vowed to residents to “return” life to what it was before.

Russia’s consumer safety watchdog warned locals to avoid being outdoors, keep their windows closed and rinse their eyes, nose and throat. But on Wednesday, the agency’s chief said there was “no health risk” for local residents.

NBC News spoke with three volunteers who helped with the cleanup efforts and aid delivery to first responders and animal shelters.

Russia Oil Terminal Fire Aftermath
Cleanup efforts to collect oil that has washed ashore in the Black Sea port ⁠of Tuapse on Sunday.Boris Morozov / Sputnik via AP

Mira, born and raised in Tuapse, said she felt compelled to help her city and had been distributing meals, water and equipment for firefighters battling the flames and aid for animal shelters. “I was in a stupor because this is my native town,” said Mira, who also did not want her last name shared due to security concerns, when asked about what it felt like to see Tuapse this way.

While the smoke has been decreasing, she said beaches and local shores were covered in oil. A tourism season this summer is “absolutely impossible,” she said, adding that official claims there were no health risks to residents were infuriating.

The building where her mother and brother live is right next to the refinery, Mira said. She is permanently evacuating them from the city to the nearby regional capital Krasnodar. “I feel horror, fear, panic,” she said.

Andrey, from the nearby Stavropol region, volunteered to clear oil from local beaches last weekend before authorities said they were taking over and asked him to leave. “Unfortunately, it’s just using shovels to collect the layer that’s floating in the water or oil from the shore along with a layer of gravel,” said Andrey, who did not want his last name revealed for the same reason as others.

Russian police officers secure an area of Tuapse on April 29, 2026.
Russian police officers secure an area of Tuapse on Wednesday as thick smoke continues to fill the air.AFP via Getty Images

Another volunteer, also called Andrey, said he had the opportunity to come help on Monday and Wednesday this week, adding that he felt “terribly sorry” for the nature. He said he saw dead dolphins and birds, and a shoreline covered in oil at one of the beaches that he worked on close to Tuapse. “We were just collecting gravel into bags and dragging them away from the waterline.” The oil has seeped about 8-12 inches into gravel and will require heavy machinery to be removed, Andrey said.

Environmental activist Yevgeniy Vitishko told NBC News he considers it the biggest environmental catastrophe in the region in quite some time. “The town and residents will be suffering from this for a long time,” Vitishko said.

 

No comments: