Over 350 tonnes of petroleum products spill into Kyiv Reservoir
News reporting indicates that more than 350 tonnes of petroleum products entered Kyrylivske Lake in Kyiv's Obolon district on or around 2 July 2026, with two Ukrainian outlets attributing the release to a reported Russian missile or drone strike on a WOG petrol station. Ukrainian authorities and rescue services are conducting clean-up operations, and coverage references ministry-level statements including the Ministry of Economy. No insured loss figure, property damage inventory, responsible-operator disclosure, clean-up cost estimate, casualty count, or downstream impact metric has been reported, and causal attribution has not been officially confirmed.
AI-generated from linked source reports. See our correction policy.
Impact verdict
Low impact. A 350-tonne petroleum release from a single retail fuel outlet into an urban inland waterbody in an active conflict zone is unlikely to reach the USD 100m international insured loss threshold. Ukrainian inland commercial property carries limited international specialty market participation under current sanctions and conflict-territory exclusions, and no insured loss, clean-up cost, or operator disclosure has been reported. Impact remains capped at LOW pending quantum, official attribution confirmation, and downstream impact evidence.
View assessment methodologyPremium discovery tier
Unlock analyst briefs, intelligence depth, and the revision timeline
Public pages show event facts and a short lead-in. Premium accounts unlock analyst briefs, deeper intelligence, loss context, and the full revision history for this event.
Start two-week trialGeographic Zone Matches
2 active matches
- JWC Listed AreasRule-basedConfidence 100%
- Sea of Azov and Black SeaRule-basedConfidence 100%
Geographic zone matches are RiskEvents spatial/analytical indicators, not coverage determinations or Lloyd's official classifications.
Affected countries
Lloyd's classifications
Tracking this kind of risk? Get an email when Environmental & Industrial events escalate.
Get alerts