Ukraine drones black out all of occupied Sevastopol. Balaklava power plant was the target

Explosions were reported overnight across multiple occupied Crimean cities, including near a radar station of Russia’s Aerospace Forces.
Sevastopol
A power substation in Sevastopol, where a major fire broke out. Credit: Crimean Wind / Telegram channel
Ukraine drones black out all of occupied Sevastopol. Balaklava power plant was the target

A large-scale Ukrainian drone attack on energy infrastructure in occupied Sevastopol left the entire city without electricity overnight on 24 June, the Russian-installed head of the city said, according to his Telegram channel.

The Balaklava thermal power plant—one of Crimea's key electricity-generating facilities—was the primary target of the strike, monitoring channels reported. The scale of damage to the plant is still being assessed, according to the Crimean Wind Telegram channel, which tracks developments on the occupied peninsula.

"As a result of the attack on our energy infrastructure, the city was temporarily left without electricity," Sevastopol's occupation head Mikhail Razvozhaev wrote. He added that residents would be updated as repairs progressed and urged them to conserve phone battery charge.

Explosions across the peninsula

Eyewitnesses and monitoring channels reported a series of powerful explosions across Crimea throughout the night. Blasts were heard in Bakhchysarai, Kerch, and near Mount Ai-Petri, where a radar station of a radio-technical battalion of Russia's Aerospace Forces is located, the Crimean Wind channel reported.

The night attack followed a preemptive move by occupation authorities: on the evening of 23 June, Oleg Kryuchkov, an adviser to the Russian-installed head of annexed Crimea, announced rolling blackout schedules for the peninsula. Approximately half of Crimea had already been left without power at that point, according to preliminary reports.

Ukraine's Unmanned Systems Forces said earlier they had struck fuel storage tanks at the Kerch thermal power plant and a 330/110 kV substation called "Western Crimea," according to their Telegram channel.

A week of strikes on Crimea and beyond

The 24 June blackout was the latest in a series of Ukrainian strikes on Crimean and Russian energy and logistics infrastructure spanning the preceding days.

On the night of 20 June, Ukrainian drones struck the Tyumen oil refinery some 2,000 km from the Ukrainian border, the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine reported.

The following night, the General Staff said the Defense Forces hit an oil terminal in occupied Kerch and Port Kavkaz on Russian territory. The commander of Ukraine's Unmanned Systems Forces, Robert Brovdi, published strike footage on his Telegram channel and addressed residents of occupied territory, apologizing "for the constant alerts, closed bridges/roads, darkness, noise and stress" and advising them to stay away "from military facilities and anything that poses a fire hazard."

On the night of 22 June, drones struck multiple targets in occupied Crimea. The Tavriiska thermal power plant, an FSB border service building in Armyansk, and fuel depots in Feodosiia were reported hit.

The night of 23 June brought strikes on a railway station, an oil terminal, and S-300/S-400 air defense positions in occupied Crimea, the Crimean Wind channel reported. A fire broke out at the Pivdenna railway station in Kerch, and satellite imagery showed several fires on the Kerch peninsula and at Port Kavkaz.

To suggest a correction or clarification, write to us here

You can also highlight the text and press Ctrl + Enter

Please leave your suggestions or corrections here



    Euromaidan Press

    We are an independent media outlet that relies solely on advertising revenue to sustain itself. We do not endorse or promote any products or services for financial gain. Therefore, we kindly ask for your support by disabling your ad blocker. Your assistance helps us continue providing quality content. Thank you!

    Related Posts

    Ads are disabled for Euromaidan patrons.

    Support us on Patreon for an ad-free experience.

    Already with us on Patreon?

    Enter the code you received on Patreon or by email to disable ads for 6 months

    Invalid code. Please try again

    Code successfully activated

    Ads will be hidden for 6 months.