• pluggerslugs@piefed.social
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    1 day ago

    According to another article I saw, local governments in rural Russia are already suspending trash collection and other services due to fuel shortages, even to the point where people are being told to find their own transportation to the hospital because there’s no gas for ambulances. For now, it’s the middle of nowhere Siberia being hit with those kinds of problems but I think we’ll see them spread westward unless the fuel shortage gets better soon.

  • tal@lemmy.todayOP
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    1 day ago

    Chita is in Zabaikalsky Krai, so it’s probably the same issue that was being complained about in Russia’s Duma in this other United24 article:

    https://lemmy.today/post/55908488

    One of them, Vyacheslav Markhayev, said people were queuing 36 hours to get just 15 litres of gasoline in the far eastern Zabaikalsky region.

    Anyway:

    A driver heading home to Saint Petersburg spent 39 hours in line to buy fuel in the Siberian city of Chita, Meduza reported on July 3.

    Vlad and his wife were driving home from Vladivostok, where they had collected a newly bought car, when they stopped in Chita to refuel. He recounted joining the line at a Rosneft station on the city’s edge on June 28 at 11 p.m. The tank was not filled until June 30, in the early afternoon.

    City stations were dispensing just 15 liters (4 gallons) per car, he explained, blaming suppliers who delivered only 500 liters (132 gallons) per outlet. The Rosneft station he chose capped each fill at 50 liters (13 gallons).

    Chita has become a bottleneck for drivers crossing the country. Vlad noted that the last station to the east lies in Skovorodino, an 11-hour drive away, with no fuel in between, funneling westbound traffic from Vladivostok into the same lines.

    So, if that that’s kind of an important point for east-west road logistics for Russia, that seems like it’s got potential to cause other cascading logistical issues from decoupling eastern and western Russia.

    Russia does have the Trans-Siberian Railway, which is apparently handled by diesel trains, and there are diesel road vehicles. Diesel doesn’t (at the moment, at any rate) suffer from the level of shortages that gasoline does.

    • SwingingTheLamp@piefed.zip
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      1 day ago

      Vlad and his wife were driving home from Vladivostok, where they had collected a newly bought car,

      Yowza. Can we assume from the location that it was a used car from Japan? How badly is the Russian economy fucked when it’s more economical to fly and then drive almost 10,000km to get a car, rather than buy one closer to St. Petersburg?

      • saltesc@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        I’m thinking Vlad may also just be a magnet for bad life decisions.

        “This is just like the time you flew halfway across the country to buy a car during a fucking fuel crisis, Vlad!” will be added to the long list of things his wife’s had to put up with.

    • tal@lemmy.todayOP
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      1 day ago

      pokes around on Google Maps

      It looks like there’s a fuel station (“Нефтемаркет”) in Bogomyagkovo, Zabaykalsky Krai, Russia, 200 km down the road from Chita. I don’t know if it has fuel available presently, but there’s a review from two years ago, and it sounds like it was operational at that time:

      Gas stations from the Soviet era, prices out of this world. They take advantage of the fact that this stretch of highway is practically deserted.