UAE Oil Giant ADNOC Shuts Ruwais Refinery After Drone Strike, Source Says
03.11.2026 By Tank Terminals - NEWS

March 11, 2026 [Reuters]- Abu Dhabi state oil giant ADNOC has shut its Ruwais refinery in response to ‌a fire at a facility within the complex following a drone strike, a source with knowledge of the situation said on Tuesday, marking the latest energy infrastructure disruption due to the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran.

 

The complex is the site of Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC) facilities that can ​refine up to 922,000 barrels of oil a day and serves as the central hub for the emirate’s ​downstream operations, including significant chemical, fertilizer and industrial gas plants.

Abu Dhabi’s government media office said authorities ⁠were responding to a fire at the facility after a drone attack, adding there were no injuries. It did not ​identify the facility.

The attack marks the latest since Tehran launched strikes on several of its neighbours in response to the ​U.S.-Israeli assault on Iran. The attacks have forced several countries to cut production as shipping in the vital Strait of Hormuz oil transit chokepoint, carrying roughly a fifth of global oil flows, has ground to a near halt.

The refinery has been shut as a precautionary measure, the source ​told Reuters, adding all other operations at the complex were continuing normally.

Industry monitor IIR Energy said ADNOC was forced to ​shut the lone crude distillation unit at its 417,000 barrel-per-day Ruwais Refinery 2 (West) after a drone attack on Tuesday, and is planning to ‌undertake a ⁠plant-wide safety shutdown.

IIR said ADNOC had previously reduced operations at multiple units at its 400,000-bpd Ruwais Refinery 1 (East) by around 10% to 20% on March 6 due to the regional conflict.

ADNOC, the Abu Dhabi Media Office and the UAE foreign ministry did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

‘CATASTROPHIC CONSEQUENCES’

In neighbouring Saudi Arabia, a small fire from an attack last week on ​the Ras Tanura refinery, its ​largest domestically, was quickly ⁠extinguished and brought under control, oil giant Saudi Aramco’s CEO Amin Nasser said on Tuesday, adding that the refinery was in the process of being restarted.

Nasser warned of “catastrophic consequences” if the ​strait remains shut, speaking as Aramco reported its results.

IIR said refineries in Saudi Arabia, Iraq, UAE, ​Bahrain, Kuwait and ⁠Qatar have shut roughly 1.9 million bpd of their crude refining capacity so far as a result of the war.

Bahrain’s Bapco Energies on Monday declared force majeure on its group operations after an attack on its oil refinery complex, while Kuwait Petroleum Corporation began cutting ⁠oil output ​on Saturday and declared force majeure.

Qatar has also shut its production of liquefied natural ​gas, which amounts to about 20% of global exports.

Meanwhile, in Asia a growing number of refineries, which are reliant on Middle East oil, have cut back ​output due to constrained crude availability.

 

TankTerminals.com is a market research platform with not only manager-level contact details but also logistical, operational, infrastructural and shipping data of more than +10,100 tank terminals and +6,200 production facilities worldwide.

 

Access data. Decide better. See how.

TotalEnergies Restarts Libya’s Mabruk Oil Field After Decade-Long Halt
03.16.2026 - NEWS
March 16, 2026 [Oil Price]- TotalEnergies has restarted production at Libya’s Mabruk oil field ... Read More
BP Wins US Approval for Kaskida Project in Gulf of Mexico, Spokesperson Says
03.16.2026 - NEWS
March 16, 2026 [Reuters]- British energy major BP has received approval from the Trump administra... Read More
Venture Global Secures $8.6bn in Financing for CP2 LNG Phase Two
03.16.2026 - NEWS
March 16, 2026 [Offshore Technology]- Venture Global has secured a final investment decision (FID... Read More
BASF to Divest Softex Business to GOVI CAST
03.16.2026 - NEWS
March 16, 2026 [BASF]- BASF has signed an Asset Purchase Agreement to sell its Softex business to... Read More