• harc@szmer.info
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    20 hours ago

    Ukrainians working hard on cutting global emissions, what is the rest of the world doing?

  • fullsquare@awful.systems
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    18 hours ago

    that tally is wildly optimistic. last time i’ve checked, one of latest strikes, the one on kirishi, disabled some 30% of capacity (it’s too big of facility to have only one oil processing stream, so there are two in parallel. the one disabled had a bit under half of capacity, and the other one is using all slack capacity it had) and only for a month or two. some of strikes listed are from year+ ago

    even with that, some 20% of oil processing capability is disabled (or was at some point), and further decrease would mean that decline in oil extraction is needed because export of crude and storage can’t keep up. which means that some oil wells would get disused, and if these are down for some time they can’t get restarted easily

    update: salavat refinery was hit like, 2h ago

    • Tuukka R@piefed.ee
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      10 hours ago

      There is no such thing as “for sure completely knocked out”. If nothing else, you can build a completely new facility on the same plot of land. And that would be “the facility having been repaired”. Ukraine is damaging the facilities so that they are off for long enough. And currently it seems that the percentage of Russian oil refinery capacity off line is growing slowly but steadily.

      It costs money keeping them off line, but it costs tenfold or hundredfold that much to get them back online. It’s a sensible deal!

      • Brave Little Hitachi Wand@lemmy.world
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        33 minutes ago

        I mean yeah. I didn’t intend to sound unimpressed, I was referring to the tiny asterisk at the bottom of the graphic. I want that factoid about total production to be true, is all.