A third person was reportedly injured in the Seversky district, where several private homes were damaged.
Russian outlet Astra, citing open-source intelligence analysis, reported that a residential building damaged in central Krasnodar is located less than two kilometers from the Kaskad Instrument Plant and JSC Saturn, both linked to Russia’s defense sector, and roughly three kilometers from the Krasnodar-Tsentralny military airfield.
Explosions reported across occupied Crimea
Explosions were also reported across occupied Crimea overnight.
Local Telegram channels reported fires in Simferopol and Sevastopol, while air raid alerts remained in effect for several hours before being lifted after 4 a.m.
According to the Crimean Wind Telegram channel, an explosion in Sevastopol appeared to be an incoming strike, with a flash observed near Kozacha Bay.
Additional strikes were reportedly recorded near Komyshova Bay and a military facility in Striletska Bay, although it remains unclear whether drones or missiles were involved.
Russian air defenses were also reported active near Armyansk. Local channels claimed drones crossed a road bridge, damaging the structure and igniting several trucks.
“The bridge at the entrance to Krasnoperekopsk from Armyansk was also damaged. It appears there are no intact bridges left at the land entrances to the peninsula,” local channels reported.
At the time of publication, Ukraine had not commented on the reported attacks.
According to the Russian Ministry of Defense, air defense forces intercepted and destroyed 330 Ukrainian drones over Russian territory overnight. The ministry said drones were detected over the Bryansk, Kursk, Belgorod, Oryol, Smolensk, Kaluga, Tula, Tver, Vladimir, and Moscow regions, as well as over Krasnodar Krai and occupied Crimea.
Due to the drone threat, Rosaviatsiya imposed restrictions on airport operations in Tambov (Donskoye), Krasnodar (Pashkovsky), Sochi, Gelendzhik, and Zhukovsky in the Moscow region starting on the evening of June 10.
Refinery strikes fuel shortages across Russia and Crimea
According to estimates by the independent Russian outlet 7x7, at least 25 Russian oblasts were experiencing gasoline shortages and supply disruptions as of June 10.
If Russia-occupied territories of Ukraine – Crimea, Sevastopol, and parts of the Luhansk, Donetsk, Kherson, and Zaporizhzhia regions – are included, the number rises to 31.
In Krasnodar Krai, some gas stations have reportedly begun shutting down due to fuel shortages.
In occupied Crimea, fuel prices have surged. As of June 10, a liter of AI-92 gasoline cost around 82 rubles ($1.13), compared with roughly 69 rubles ($0.69) in Moscow, while AI-95 reached nearly 90 rubles per liter versus 75 rubles in the Russian capital. Resellers were reportedly offering fuel for 130-150 rubles per liter ($5.35 to $6.17 per gallon), around 50% above official Crimean prices.
The shortages are largely attributed to Ukrainian strikes on Russia’s oil refining infrastructure.
According to Bloomberg, Russian refineries were attacked 38 times between January and May 2026, including 16 attacks in May alone – the highest monthly figure since the start of the full-scale war. Data from OilX indicates refinery utilization has fallen 14% since the beginning of the year and remains about 20% below pre-war levels.